Religion Watch Archives

Monitoring Trends in Religion - From February 1990 to January 2016

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archives
    • By Issue
    • By Article
    • By PDF (2008-14)
    • By PDF (1985-97)
    • All Articles
  • Sections
    • Current Research
    • Findings & Footnotes
    • On/File
  • Google Search
You are here: Home / Archives for Richard Cimino

Advocacy and defensiveness still mark Islamic studies after 9/11

March 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

The academic study of Islam has grown rapidly in American universities, particularly since the events surrounding Sept. 11, but scholarly study has turned more toward defense of the field and sometimes Islam itself rather than engaging in new lines of research, writes Richard C. Martin in the Journal of the American Academy of Religion (December). […]

Filed Under: Archive

A dominant role for religion still likely in Egypt

March 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

“There is a need to secularize society [in Egypt]!” said Bishop Yohanna Qolta, Deputy Patriarch of the Catholic Copts, to a group of surprised Swiss and Egyptian journalists recently. The bishop made the unexpected statement to journalists who had been invited by the Religioscope Institute to attend a week-long seminar on Media & Religion in […]

Filed Under: Archive

Findings & Footnotes: January/February 2011

January 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

01: Olivier Roy, a prominent Islamic specialist, has branched out considerably to study the contours of globalized religion in his new book Holy Ignorance (Columbia University Press, $27.50). Roy looks at the whole spectrum of contemporary religion and sees a dominant trend of individualized faith and a separation of religious faith from cultural roots and […]

Filed Under: Findings & Footnotes

Intensifying ‘Buddhist warfare’ in southern Thailand

January 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

With a bomb explosion killing nine people on January 25, this month’s toll of insurgency-related deaths in Muslim-majority southern Thailand rose to 22. Around 30,000 soldiers and thousands of paramilitary troops guard the three provinces of Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat that border Malaysia. At least 4,000 people have been killed and over 7,000 injured in […]

Filed Under: Archive

Behind India’s newfound love for Buddha

January 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

India is a Hindu majority country, but the recently opened Terminal 3 of the Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi, the capital, showcases statues of the Buddha. There are no other religious symbols at the airport apart from the Buddha, although Buddhists form less than one percent of the country’s 1.2 billion people. In addition, […]

Filed Under: Archive

Indian megachurches—cell-based, ornate and pastor-led

January 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

India’s megachurches are growing and tend to be housed in huge, luxurious buildings, are based on networks of cell groups, and show strong leadership from the senior pastor, reports an article in Lausanne World Pulse (January/ February), an evangelical newsletter on world missions. The article provides case studies of three Indian megachurches (without reporting on […]

Filed Under: Archive

Moldova’s Orthodox competition, political involvement drives down church influence?

January 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

Since 1992 there have been two competing Orthodox jurisdictions in the Republic of Moldova. Nearly two decades later, the situation seems only to have contributed to a weakening of the influence of both groups, reports Andreai Avram (Moldova-Institut Leipzig, Germany) in the monthly magazine G2W (January). Following the emergence of a national movement in Moldova […]

Filed Under: Archive

New tensions between Vatican and China

January 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

“Is the honeymoon over?” asks the magazine Inside the Vatican (December), following a consecration of a Chinese bishop deemed to be illicit by the Holy See on Nov. 20. Subsequent nominations at the helm of “official” Chinese Catholic bodies in China have seemed to confirm the assessment that relations between the Roman Catholic Church and Beijing […]

Filed Under: Archive

Anti-Coptic terrorism, conflict spreading beyond Egypt?

January 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

The intensifying violence and terrorism committed against Egypt’s Coptic Christians show signs of spreading into Egyptian diaspora communities in the West, reports The Tablet magazine (Jan. 8). The current revolts in Egypt and the participation of Egyptian immigrants in Western countries in such protests suggests the strong transnational ties that exist beyond that country. Since […]

Filed Under: Archive

Current Research: January/February 2011

January 1, 2011 by Richard Cimino

01: The number of religious “nones,” or the unaffiliated, in the last two decades has grown significantly, but this group may be about evenly split between secular and more religious elements, according to a recent study. Surveys showing the percentage of religious nones have indicated that they range be-tween 11 percent and 20 percent of the […]

Filed Under: Current Research

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 42
  • 43
  • 44
  • 45
  • 46
  • …
  • 193
  • Next Page »

Search the Site

Download the first issue of RELIGION WATCH (1980)

Download the first issue of RELIGION WATCH (1980)

Click on the image for downloading

© 2016-2023 Richard Cimino / Religioscope
·News Pro Theme · Genesis Framework by StudioPress · WordPress