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one - Introduction: religion and social policy – an “old–new” partnership

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2022

Rana Jawad
Affiliation:
University of Bath
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Summary

One wonders whether the greater willingness of social scientists to consider religious factors in Third World cases might be the result of a strange marriage of positivism and post-modernism in which cultural relativism serves as cover for a deep-seated modernism that still sees religion as a symptom of backwardness. (Gorski, 2005, p 187)

[R]eligious faith is a good thing in itself, … far from being a reactionary force, it has a major part to play in shaping the values which guide the modern world, and can and should be a force for progress … I see Faith and Reason, Faith and Progress, as in alliance not contention…. We can think of the great humanitarian enterprises which bring relief to those who are suffering – the Red Cross, the Red Crescent or Islamic Relief, CAFOD and Christian Aid, Hindu Aid and SEWA International, World Jewish Relief and Khalsa Aid – all the charities which draw inspiration from the teachings of the different faiths…. And in the West, for example, we owe an incalculable debt to the Judaeo-Christian tradition in terms of our concepts of human worth and dignity, law and democracy. (Blair, 2008, p 9)

Once the muse of the founding fathers of the modern social sciences, today religion has mostly become associated with a regressive or self-deluding impulse; or at best it is regarded as a cultural artefact. By the 1970s, few scholars would have imagined the centrality of religion on the world stage in the new millennium, but the last three decades have indeed been marked by the prominence of religiously inspired social and political mobilisation worldwide, as highlighted by a variety of publications that consider evidence on all the world religions (Antoun and Hegland, 1987; Moyser, 1991; Esposito, 2000; Mitsuo, 2001; Haynes, 2003; Madeley and Enyedi, 2003; Sutton and Vertigans, 2005; Bacon, 2006; Freston, 2007; Thomas, 2007; Delibas, 2009).

Is Tony Blair, previous leader of one of the most advanced and secular nations of the world, now a global development protagonist, lecturing on faith and globalisation at Yale University and seeking to broker Middle East peace, blowing the trumpet of neoliberalism and pointing us in the direction of things to come? Can religious identity be party to the making of the good society of the future?

Type
Chapter
Information
Social Welfare and Religion in the Middle East
A Lebanese Perspective
, pp. 1 - 24
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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