Results for tag: conflict
CRCPD’s public lecture by Prof. John Paul Lederach – ‘Mobilizing the moral imagination’
Date: | 30 November 2016 |
Author: | Religion Factor |
Tomorrow, 1st of December, Professor John Paul Lederach will, in a lecture organised by The Centre of Religion and Conflict in the Public Domain, talk about ‘Mobilizing the moral imagination: Religion in the landscape of fragmentation’. Join us for the lecture and the discussion with great panel of expert respondents: dr. Michelle Parlevliet, specialist in Conflict Resolution and Governance at UVA, Fulco van Deventer, director at the Human Security Collective in the Hague and Simone Filippini, previous CEO and current advisor at Cordaid.
Religious identity and the Refugee Crisis
Date: | 20 June 2016 |
Author: | Religion Factor |
Today, 20 June, is World Refugee Day. The UNHCR released its annual Global Trends Report. For the first time in the organisation’s history, global displacement has crossed the 60 million threshold, with a total of 65.3 million people displaced in 2015. That’s 24 people every minute, or 1 in every 113 people.
Is Reconciliation Possible after Violent Conflict? Analysing Christian Peacebuilders and their Promotion of Reconciliation
Date: | 23 October 2015 |
Author: | Religion Factor |
Last week, Dr Gladys Ganiel delivered a lecture at the Centre for Religion, Conflict and the Public Domain, University of Groningen as part of the seminar series. The lecture explored possibilities for reconciliation, the weaknesses of approaches to reconciliation as well as its strengths.
It’s not all about Islam: misreading secular politics in the Middle East
Date: | 07 May 2015 |
Author: | Religion Factor |
Western policymakers once understood the dynamics of secular politics in the Middle East, but this knowledge has been subsumed under a fixation on Islam’s supposed threat to western security interests, writes today´s guest contributor Dr Stacey Gutkowski.
Religion and Conflict: Beyond Clichés and Stereotypes
Date: | 02 April 2015 |
Author: | Religion Factor |
Religion and conflict seem to be more prevalent than ever in contemporary global politics and society. So often in public debate we hear that religion is either violent or it is peaceful, that it is oppressive or it promotes justice. But are these the only two ways of thinking about religion and conflict? In today’s post, Marjo Buitelaar, Kim Knibbe and Erin Wilson consider some possible alternatives and invite you to join them to explore these issues further in a free online course.
ISIS’ Caliphate and Intra-jihadist Struggles for Authority
Date: | 08 July 2014 |
Author: | Religion Factor |
On Sunday 29 June, the first day of Ramadan 2014, ISIS announced the restoration of the caliphate. From now on, its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, is “the caliph for Muslims everywhere”, the message states, adding that the name of the organisation, The Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham, becomes simply The Islamic State.
Sinterklaas, Zwarte Piet and the Ethics of Public Debate
Date: | 15 November 2013 |
Author: | Religion Factor |
Sinterklaas and his somewhat controversial helper Zwarte Piet arrive in the Netherlands tomorrow, marking the start of the festive season. In today’s post, Erik Meinema and Erin Wilson offer thoughts from both Dutch and non-Dutch perspectives on various...
Allergic Reaction to “The Religious Other” or just a Neurobiological Fact?
Date: | 25 June 2013 |
Author: | Religion Factor |
Neurobiology, Social influence and its impact on our capacity to empathize.
Antisemitisme Nederlandse Moslimjongeren; Sociaal Probleem
Date: | 28 March 2013 |
In de post van vandaag bespreekt dr. Marjo Buitelaar het sociale probleem van antisemitisime onder Nederlandse Moslimjongeren. Daarin bespreekt zij zogenaamde oorzaken en de misperceptie daarvan door, onder andere, de media.
On the Political and the Personal. Or, How to Retain a Sense of “Humanity” in Egypt? Part 2
Date: | 11 December 2012 |
Author: | Religion Factor |
Dr Vivienne Matthies-Boon is currently in Cairo. In this continuation of her previous post, she shares with us some of her experiences and reflections on the ongoing conflict between pro-democracy campaigners and supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood.