ABSTRACT
In the last half century new religious movements or cults of one sort and another have mushroomed throughout the US and Europe. Increasingly these groups have been met with attempts to monitor and control them on the part of the state, and concerns about the protection of religious 'consumers' have been set against the democratic right to religious freedom. In this collection, leading sociologists of religion from the UK, US, Western and Eastern Europe debate the political, practical and ethical issues which arise from these changes in the religious landscape.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |9 pages
Introduction
part |1 pages
PART I New religious movements
chapter |10 pages
Absolutes and relatives: two problems for new religious movements
chapter |10 pages
Religion and the Internet: the global marketplace
chapter |9 pages
Religious groups and globalisation: a comparative perspective
chapter |12 pages
Religious groups and globalisation: a comparative perspective
part |1 pages
PART II Religious ‘deviance’ and control
chapter |10 pages
Notes on the contemporary peril to religious freedom
chapter |11 pages
The countercult monitoring movement in historical perspective
chapter |12 pages
The making of a moral panic: religion and state in Singapore
part |1 pages
PART III Religious freedom and empowerment
chapter |12 pages
What’s happening in American church/state jurisprudence?
chapter |15 pages
Religious toleration in Western and Central European countries
chapter |10 pages
Religious minorities in France: a Protestant perspective
chapter |10 pages
Gendered spiritualities
part |1 pages
PART IV Philosophy and methods