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New Landscapes of Religion in the West
Author(s) -
Fauzia Ahmad
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
american journal of islam and society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2690-3741
pISSN - 2690-3733
DOI - 10.35632/ajis.v18i1.2041
Subject(s) - multiculturalism , islam , sociology , hinduism , pluralism (philosophy) , religious pluralism , identity (music) , gender studies , anthropology , social science , geography , religious studies , archaeology , epistemology , pedagogy , art , philosophy , aesthetics
Set within the grand and lush surroundings of Mansfield College, OxfordUniversity, and hosted by the Department of Geography, this conference,held between September 27-29,20o0, attracted some of Europe’s key academicsfrom such varied disciplines as human geography, social anthropology,theology, and sociology. They met to discuss the creation andassertion, by minorities, of religious spaces in the West. About thirty tothirty-five participants discussed both empirical data and theoreticaldebates within the contexts of multiculturalism, identity, and minorityrights. Out of twenty-one papers, eight specifically dwelt on Muslim communitiesand spaces, nine were of a more general nature, focusing either onhistorical or general overviews or theoretical issues, while four concentmtedon Hindu and Sikh movements in the West. Much of the work presentedwas derived from projects conducted as part of the ESRC’s ResearchProgram on Transnational Communities, which is directed by SteveVertovec who is in the Faculty of Anthropology and Geography at theUniversity of Oxford. Vertovec, who is editor of Muslim European Youth(1998), and Ceri Peach were joint editors of Islam in Europe (1997).The conference began with a keynote address from Diana Eck of HarvardUniversity describing The Pluralism Project of which she was director. Theproject had three main aims: first, to document the increasing religiousdiversity and changing religious landscape and demography of Americancities; second, to study how religious communities are changing; and third,to assess how American society is adapting to a multireligious reality. Shedescribed how the conversion of old buildings to the development of purpose-built centers such as mosques, temples, and gurdwaras marked anarchitectural reality that served to acknowledge the United States as a pluralistsociety. Muslim communities in the US, she noted, numberedbetween five to seven million-almost as numerous as the Jewish population,and more than some Christian sects. She stressed the dynamism ofcommunity adaptations and the existence of some ‘ethnic enclaving.’ The ...

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