“Populism and
Religion: Cooperation or Conflict?”
Luigi Einaudi Campus (CLE), University of Turin, Turin (Italy), 15-20 June 2020.
The Department of Cultures, Politics and Society of the University of Turin
is pleased to announce the first edition of its Summer School on Religion and
Politics, organized with the support of the UNITO Workshop on Contemporary
Religions and Faiths in Transition (CRAFT), the standing group on Religion and
Politics of the European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR), the Research
Committee 43 Religion and Politics of the International Political Science
Association (IPSA), and the Standing Group on Politics and Religion of the
Società Italiana di Scienza Politica (SISP).
The relation between religion and politics has become increasingly relevant
for the understanding of the contemporary world. After the so-called “revenge
of God” started in the last decades of the 20th century, the sacred has become
a crucial factor both in international affairs and conflict/peacebuilding
processes; and in domestic affairs, with an increasing role in public debates
and policy making. This is particularly true considering the role of the
religious factor in old and new debates related to bioethics, state secularism,
immigration, gender issues, protection of the environment.
This first edition of the summer school will focus on the role of religion
in the global phenomenon of right-wing populist parties. This new category of
party is marked by peculiar uses of religion and religious symbols, often
different from that of ‘traditional’ religiously oriented parties. While in
some cases populist positions and policies go hand in hand with those of
religious institutions, in others - for example on the issues of immigration
and protection of the environment - they can clash with these latter.
Understanding these phenomena is crucial, also considering that they
overlap with other issues and concerns such as interreligious coexistence in
increasing multicultural social contexts, human rights (and particularly
women’s rights and LGBT+ rights), and social justice.
The summer school, that will run from Monday 15 June 2020 to Saturday 20
June 2020 is addressed to junior scholars, graduate students and MA students
willing to go in depth in the subject of religion and politics with the help of
internationally renowned scholars; as well as to members of international
organizations, NGOs, and public administrations, who want to get a better
theoretical basis for their work.
Faculty:
Isabelle Engeli (University of Exeter)
Jeffrey Haynes (Metropolitan University, London)
Michael Minkenberg (European University Viadrina)
Luca Ozzano (University of Turin)
Timothy Peace (Univeristy of Glasgow)
Sultan Tepe (University of
Chicago)