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Dear All,





*Construction and disruption: The power of religion in the public sphere*

*Tuesday 12th – Thursday 14th July 2016*

*Lancaster University*



*Keynote speakers:*

Professor Gordon Lynch (Kent University)

Dr Abby Day (Goldsmiths & Kent University)

More speakers to be announced



The last twenty years has seen a crisis of trust in major public
institutions, from politics and media, to banking, to health, social care
and education. Alongside this crisis has been a renewed visibility of
religion in society, with religions often offering critical but contentious
voices, as well as being key but contested contributors to political
activism and welfare service delivery.



In this context, prominent theorists such as Jürgen Habermas, Slavov Zizek,
Charles Taylor and Manuel Vásquez have suggested that religion may hold the
key to reenergising the public sphere. Yet religions are just as often seen
as disruptive, as engulfed in similar crises of trust, as undermining
shared values, or as presenting challenging practices. With societies now
becoming more secular, more religious and more plural all at once, claims
abound that one group or another is being favoured or presents a threat.
This tension is further complicated by contested developments in the
understanding of religion: some scholars have broadened the category of
religion to include ostensibly secular ideas and practices; others have
suggested that religions are acting less like states, with large
bureaucracies and loyal citizens, and more like markets that cater to
consumers, with belief less likely to be based on dogma than modes of
belonging or self-expression; others still suggest that future success for
religions will require greater recognition of ethnic minorities, women and
LGBT communities.



The purpose of the conference is to examine these and other characteristics
of contemporary religion in order to achieve a greater understanding of its
constructive and disruptive impact in the public sphere. What are the key
categories, discourses, contexts and institutions through which this
question can be explored? How do practitioners navigate these
characteristics?



The conference welcomes a wide range of topics relating to religion in
society and hopes to encourage a space where different faith perspectives
can come together.



Possible topics could include (but are not limited to) the following:



•             Religion constructing or disrupting the public sphere

•             Religion and politics

•             Religion and media

•             Religion and economics

•             Religion and health and social care

•             Religion and education



To deliver a paper, please send an abstract of no more than 250 words,
alongside a biographical note of no more than 50 words. We will also be
accepting a limited number of panel proposals. To deliver a panel, please
send an abstract of no more than 500 words alongside a biographical note of
no more than 50 words for each contributor.



Please send abstracts to the attention of the conference organizers: Emily
Winter (Lancaster University), Dr Roger Haydon Mitchell (Lancaster
University), Dr Anderson Jeremiah (Lancaster University) and Tim Stacey
(Goldsmiths) at: [log in to unmask]
<javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml',[log in to unmask]);>



Abstracts must be submitted by *11 December 2015*. A limited number of
bursaries are available to support postgraduate, early career, low income
or unwaged SocRel members to present at the conference. Please visit
www.socrel.org.uk for instructions, and to download an application form,
and submit your bursary application along with your abstract by *11
December 2015*.



For further details, visit the SocRel website: www.socrel.org.uk. For
further details about the BSA visit www.britsoc.co.uk.



****All presenters must be members of Socrel.*



Selected authors will be asked to contribute to an edited volume.



*Key Dates*:



Abstract submission opens: 12 October 2015

Early bird registration opens: 12 October 2015

Abstract submission closes: 11 December 2015

Decision notification: 27 January 2016

Presenter registration closes: 15 March 2016

Early bird registration closes:  3 June 2016

Registration closes: 24 June 2016



Registration to attend the conference is now open. To register please click
HERE
<http://portal.britsoc.co.uk/public/event/eventBooking.aspx?id=EVT10466>.
Please note that after Friday, 3 June 2016, a £50 late registration fee
will apply to all bookings.



Should you have other questions about the conference please contact the
conference organisers at [log in to unmask]
<javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml',[log in to unmask]);>.



Best wishes,



Rachael Shillitoe

SocRel conference and events officer



Rachael Shillitoe

Research Student – Faith on the Air

University of Worcester

Research School

Jenny Lind Building

Farrier Street

Worcester

WR1 3BB

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