Worldly Politics and Divine Institutions: Contemporary Entanglements of Faith and Government
Autor Nahshon Perezen Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 iun 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197579718
ISBN-10: 019757971X
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 162 x 242 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 019757971X
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 162 x 242 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
In Worldly Politics and Divine Institutions, Nahshon Perez explores multiple modes of entanglement of religion and the state in modern democracies, each with its own set of implications. The precision Perez brings to his analysis is impressive. Underlying his comparison of entanglement and separation models are fundamental concerns about the status of religious minorities. This book has much to offer not only to those who are interested in contemporary political theory on religion and the state, but also those interested in the treatment of religious minorities in other times and contexts.
Nahshon Perez has written a book that greatly advances our ability to evaluate entanglements between religion and government. Moving beyond simplistic conceptions of separation between religion and state, it offers an empirically-informed framework for teasing out the different forms that interactions between religion and government can take. It breaks down the interests that are potentially threatened by church-state entanglements, including civic equality, nondiscrimination, and freedom of association, pushing us to consider the possibility that different regimes threaten these interests to various degrees and that some forms of interaction between religion and government are consistent with or supportive of these interests. This important book provides us with new tools to evaluate the merits of separationist claims.
In his Worldly Politics and Divine Institutions Nahshon Perez breaks new ground in the study of the entanglements of religion and the state in democracies. Perez does so by employing an approach that is innovative both normatively and methodologically. Unlike many for whom the separationist departure point for analysis - that separationist models of religion and state are normatively superior in democratic settings - is set in stone, Perez's novel casuistic bottom-up approach and analytic sharpness succeeds to originate nuanced lessons from real-life cases of entanglement. Worldly Politics and Divine Institutions will undoubtedly become an important reference point for students of religion and state.
Using a selection of fascinating and telling case studies, Worldly Politics and Divine Institutions builds from the ground up to develop a practical method that can guide both political theorists and policymakers through the labyrinth of entanglement. Written with sharp clarity that nevertheless pays careful attention to the complexity of nuanced details, it is an essential intervention in the scholarship on religion and state in liberal democracy.
Is there anything new to say about the entanglement of religion and the state? On the evidence of Nahshon Perez's book , the answer is an emphatic "yes". What distinguishes this work is its remarkable methodological self-awareness. Perez defends a novel approach to doing political ethics, which combines casuistry and what he calls a "contextual" methodology, and which jointly yield rich and quite novel theoretical dividends. This book will be a "must-read" for both political theorists and for empirical researchers working on the relationship between the state and religion.
Worldly Politics and Divine Institutions is a valuable book... Perez offers an excellent summary of the difficulty of these religious-political entanglements and a framework for how best to address them.
This is a fascinating book that contributes to the study of comparative law and religion. It blends political theory and empirical social science in a novel and intriguing way. Erudite yet accessible, analytically sharp, systematically delivered, and impressive in detail, it deserves a wide readership among scholars of religion and politics, international law, comparative politics, and anyone interested in the scientific study of religion.
Nahshon Perez has written a book that greatly advances our ability to evaluate entanglements between religion and government. Moving beyond simplistic conceptions of separation between religion and state, it offers an empirically-informed framework for teasing out the different forms that interactions between religion and government can take. It breaks down the interests that are potentially threatened by church-state entanglements, including civic equality, nondiscrimination, and freedom of association, pushing us to consider the possibility that different regimes threaten these interests to various degrees and that some forms of interaction between religion and government are consistent with or supportive of these interests. This important book provides us with new tools to evaluate the merits of separationist claims.
In his Worldly Politics and Divine Institutions Nahshon Perez breaks new ground in the study of the entanglements of religion and the state in democracies. Perez does so by employing an approach that is innovative both normatively and methodologically. Unlike many for whom the separationist departure point for analysis - that separationist models of religion and state are normatively superior in democratic settings - is set in stone, Perez's novel casuistic bottom-up approach and analytic sharpness succeeds to originate nuanced lessons from real-life cases of entanglement. Worldly Politics and Divine Institutions will undoubtedly become an important reference point for students of religion and state.
Using a selection of fascinating and telling case studies, Worldly Politics and Divine Institutions builds from the ground up to develop a practical method that can guide both political theorists and policymakers through the labyrinth of entanglement. Written with sharp clarity that nevertheless pays careful attention to the complexity of nuanced details, it is an essential intervention in the scholarship on religion and state in liberal democracy.
Is there anything new to say about the entanglement of religion and the state? On the evidence of Nahshon Perez's book , the answer is an emphatic "yes". What distinguishes this work is its remarkable methodological self-awareness. Perez defends a novel approach to doing political ethics, which combines casuistry and what he calls a "contextual" methodology, and which jointly yield rich and quite novel theoretical dividends. This book will be a "must-read" for both political theorists and for empirical researchers working on the relationship between the state and religion.
Worldly Politics and Divine Institutions is a valuable book... Perez offers an excellent summary of the difficulty of these religious-political entanglements and a framework for how best to address them.
This is a fascinating book that contributes to the study of comparative law and religion. It blends political theory and empirical social science in a novel and intriguing way. Erudite yet accessible, analytically sharp, systematically delivered, and impressive in detail, it deserves a wide readership among scholars of religion and politics, international law, comparative politics, and anyone interested in the scientific study of religion.
Notă biografică
Nahshon Perez is Associate Professor at the Department of Political Studies at Bar Ilan University. His books include: Governing the Sacred: Political Toleration in Five Contested Sacred Sites and Women of the Wall: Navigating Religion in Sacred Sites, both with Oxford University Press (co-authored with Y. Jobani).