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Education and Tolerance
A Comparative Quantitative Analysis of the Educational Effect on Tolerance©2017 Monographs -
Literature, Culture, and Tolerance
©2010 Conference proceedings -
The Social Policy of the AKP toward the Kurds
Healthcare Provision in Hakkâri (2003–2014)©2023 Monographs -
Democratization, Europeanization, and Globalization Trends
Cross-National Analysis of Authoritarianism, Socialization, Communications, Youth, and Social Policy©2005 Edited Collection -
Cultural Differences in Network Communication
How Polish, German and Ukrainian Netizens Use Social Media©2018 Monographs -
Landmarks in German Drama
©2002 Edited Collection -
Enlightenment and Genocide, Contradictions of Modernity
©2000 Edited Collection -
Neo-Disneyism
Inclusivity in the Twenty-First Century of Disney’s Magic Kingdom©2022 Edited Collection -
Preston King
©2022 Monographs -
Religion in the Public Sphere in Central and Eastern Europe
©2022 Edited Collection -
Bangladesh Divided
Political and Literary Reflections on a Corrupt Police and Prison State©2019 Monographs -
Spinoza's Philosophy of Divine Order
©2015 Monographs -
Religions in the Public Spheres
©2012 Edited Collection -
Subcultures and New Religious Movements in Russia and East-Central Europe
©2009 Conference proceedings -
Scripture and Deism
The Biblical Criticism of the Eighteenth-Century British Deists©2008 Monographs -
Slave to the Body
Black Bodies, White No-Bodies and the Regulative Dualism of Body-Politics in the Old South©2003 Thesis -
Histories of Religious Pluralism
ISSN: 2632-3257
This new book series will show that a critical understanding of religious pluralism in the past is of vital significance to debates about identity, diversity, and co-existence in the present. Studies will focus on using a historical perspective to address one of three key themes in the period between 1500 and 2000 CE: intra-religious pluralism; inter-religious pluralism; or, religion, secularism, and the nation state. Within this frame of reference, constructive contrasts between a wide range of foci, approaches, and viewpoints will be keenly encouraged. The series will champion established lines of research in political, social, cultural, and gendered histories of religious pluralism – e.g. studies on liberty, persecution, and toleration – whilst also encouraging novel ways of transcending a scholarly discourse which is dominated by ideologies and methodologies derived from the social sciences – e.g. by studies on the theological and literary dimensions of conflict, cohesion, and community. The series will embrace scholarship on subjects from any part of the world. European and extra-European perspectives that complement traditional Anglo-American thinking are particularly welcome. As the ‘global turn’ continues to energize new types of enquiry, the series will also seek to advance studies of indigenous and displaced religious groups. With this scope there is a reflexive acknowledgement that the rationale for and defining concepts of the series are grounded in a ‘western’ intellectual tradition; however, this should serve as a challenge to prospective authors to pioneer new dialogues between ‘western’ and ‘non-western’ approaches and foci, or even surpass the dichotomy altogether. An emphasis will be given to promoting the best research of early career scholars from around the world, whilst also giving more established academics the opportunity to develop their multimedia policy-orientated work – e.g. podcasts, blogs, talks, press briefings, reports for thinktanks, governments, and public agencies etc. – into a book that would engage peers and students alike. In association with Cambridge Institute on Religion and International Studies
3 publications