This volume of essays explores the long-unstudied relationship between religion and human security throughout the world. The 1950s marked the beginning of a period of extraordinary religious revival, during which religious political-parties and non-governmental organizations gained power around the globe. Until now, there has been little systematic study of the impact that this phenomenon has had on human welfare, except of a relationship between religious revival to violence. The authors of these essays show that religion can have positive as well as negative effects on human wellbeing. They address a number of crucial questions about the relationship between religion and human security: Under what circumstances do religiously motivated actors tend to advance human welfare, and under what circumstances do they tend to threaten it? Are members of some religious groups more likely to engage in welfare-enhancing behavior than in others? Do certain state policies tend to promote security-enhancing behavior among religious groups while other policies tend to promote security-threatening ones? In cases where religious actors are harming the welfare of a population, what responses could eliminate that threat without replacing it with another? Religion and Human Security shows that many states tend to underestimate the power of religious organizations as purveyors of human security. Governments overlook both the importance of human security to their populations and the religious groups who could act as allies in securing the welfare of their people. This volume offers a rich variety of theoretical perspectives on the nuanced relationship between religion and human security. Through case studies ranging from Turkey, Egypt, and Pakistan, to the United States, Northern Ireland, and Zimbabwe, it provides important suggestions to policy makers of how to begin factoring the influence of religion into their evaluation of a population's human security and into programs designed to improve human security around the globe.
About the AuthorJames K. Wellman is Associate Professor, Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington. Clark Lombardi is Associate Professor, School of Law, University of Washington.
Reviewsthis volume offers an important contribution to the study of the new field of human security, introducing this important concept to scholars of religion. Its strongest suit, however, is not its sketchy contribution to the theoretical links between religion and human security, but rather the impressively wide array it presents of relationships between religious actors and political regimes. * Adam Klin-Oron, Sociology of Religion *
Book InformationISBN 9780199827732
Author James K. WellmanFormat Hardback
Page Count 344
Imprint Oxford University Press IncPublisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 658g
Dimensions(mm) 159mm * 241mm * 19mm