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Below is a list of teaching resources designed to assist professors in incorporating learning about the many dimensions of religious diversity into their courses.
Religious Mapping
Living with Religious Diversity
Islamophobia
RLG312H Video Project
While working at the University of Leeds, Religion and Diversity Project team member Kim Knott developed a religious mapping project as a way of teaching undergraduate students about religious diversity as it relates to their local context. Kim has incorporated some of the results of religious mapping into her publications and public presentations and has created websites featuring the results of her other research projects on religious diversity in the UK. These resources can help in the adaptation of the religious mapping project for students in other local contexts.
In 2013, scholars from Religious Studies, Sociology, Political Science, History and Philosophy, and speakers from Canada, India, the US and the UK came together in New Dehli, India for a conference called "Living with Religious Diversity". Funding for the workshop was provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC), the University of Ottawa, and the India International Centre (IIC) in Delhi. Leo Van Arragon, a former graduate student and student team member of the Religion and Diversity Project from the University of Ottawa, participated in the workshop and interviewed several scholars about different aspects of their research on religious diversity. Video clips of these interviews along with discussion guides can be used in teaching about religious diversity, especially in relation to subjects such as the religions of India, secularism, human rights, power and gender.
To access the "Living with Religious Diversity" website to view all the videos, please click here.
Topic # 1: Liberal secularism and the basis for human rights and democracy | ||
Question: Are there conceptual bases for human rights in non-Western traditions? | ||
Watch the videos Rinku Lamba (Jawaharlal Nehru University) suggests the Bhakti tradition as a source of human rights language within Hinduism. | ![]() | ![]() |
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Rinku Lamba's Publications For further information on Rinku Lamba’s ideas about the role of the state in creating a just society, Bhakti as a theme in Hinduism and as a basis for civic and personal values, please consult her publications listed below. | ||
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Watch the videos Ashwani Peetush (Wilfrid Laurier University) challenges the idea that liberal secularism is the only basis for what he calls an "overlapping consensus" essential for civic harmony or human rights. He offers an argument calling for consideration of multiple interpretive foundations. | ||
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Ashwani Peetush's Publications | ||
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Ashwani Peetush refers to John Rawls. For a summary of Rawls’ commitment to liberal secularism as the basis for overlapping consensus please see the publications below. | ||
Other publications | ||
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Assumption to be interrogated: That religion is inherently the basis for hegemonic power. Question: Is religion always the basis for hegemonic power or can it also provide a language and framework for resistance and emancipation? | ||
Watch the videos Sebastian Velassery (Panjab University) talks about "Casteism and Religion in India". | ![]() | ![]() |
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Sebastian Velassery's Publications | ||
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Watch the videos Charu Gupta (University of Delhi) examines the phenomena of desire and conversion in the context of Dalit women. Her work focuses on the intersection between gender, caste and religion. | ||
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Topic # 3: Plurality and pluralism | ||
Assumption to be interrogated: Religion is hostile to religious diversity Question: How can religion provide language for both resistance to and space for social and religious pluralism? | ||
Watch the videos Arshad Alam (Jawaharlal Nehru University) speaks about "Indian Islam and Pluralism." | ||
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Watch Sebastian Velassery's Religion, Ethnicity and the St. Thomas Christians of Kerala video where he describes the shaping of Christianity to the Indian cultural environment. | ||
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Following the events of 9/11 in the United States, the subject of Islam and the rights of Muslim citizens have become a regular part of popular discourse (a database of media articles related to Muslim women can be accessed here). To facilitate learning situations that break down stereotypes and increase understanding of the complexity religious minority rights in the West, Giomny H. Ruiz, a graduate student at the Université de Montréal and a student team member of the Religion and Diversity Project, has developed teaching resources that incorporate visual methods.
The goal of this group project is to give the students an opportunity to demonstrate their mastery of the course material and subject matter in a novel way. Together with a partner, they can create a ten-minute video of an interview with one scholar of religion regarding one of the written texts (e.g., a published article). The video should provide an introduction to the scholar in general, as well as a critical discussion of the sample of his or her work they have been given. Imagine that the video will appear on a departmental website used to give outsiders a sense of who this scholar is, what kind of work s/he does, how and why s/he does it the way s/he does, and why this work matters. For the detailed instructions, please click here. For the course syllabus, please click here.
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Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs
Le Berkley Center at Georgetown University a été créé au sein du bureau de John J. DeGioia, Président de Georgetown, en mars 2006. Le centre a été conçu afin de miser sur les forces de Georgetown: l'excellence académique; son emplacement à Washington, DC; sa portée internationale et sa tradition catholique et jésuite d'ouverture aux autres religions et au vaste monde séculier. Le généreux soutien de William R. Berkley, un membre du conseil d'administration de l'université, a permis la croissance rapide du centre.
Pour plus de renseignements, veuillez cliquer ici.
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The Project is happy to provide information about research centres, initiatives and projects across Canada and beyond that are focusing on the examination of religion, diversity, pluralism and society through its “Research Centres” page. Led by our Team Member Pamela Klassen and housed at the University of Toronto, the mandate of the Religion in the Public Sphere initiative is to examine how religion manifests in public spaces, institutions, and interactions, and consider the challenges and possibilities of religious diversity in Toronto and around the globe. To learn more about this initiative, please click here.