Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Foreword and Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 The Broken Chain of Learning: the Crisis of Religion and Belief Literacy and its Origins
- 2 Policy Framings of Religion and Belief: Consolidating the Muddle
- 3 Religion and Belief in Religious Education
- 4 Religion and Belief Across Schools
- 5 Religion and Belief in University Practices
- 6 Religion and Belief in University Teaching and Learning
- 7 Religion and Belief in Professional Education and Workplaces
- 8 Religion and Belief in Community Education and Learning
- 9 The Future of Religion and Belief Literacy: Reconnecting a Chain of Learning
- Notes
- References
- Index
Foreword and Acknowledgements
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Foreword and Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 The Broken Chain of Learning: the Crisis of Religion and Belief Literacy and its Origins
- 2 Policy Framings of Religion and Belief: Consolidating the Muddle
- 3 Religion and Belief in Religious Education
- 4 Religion and Belief Across Schools
- 5 Religion and Belief in University Practices
- 6 Religion and Belief in University Teaching and Learning
- 7 Religion and Belief in Professional Education and Workplaces
- 8 Religion and Belief in Community Education and Learning
- 9 The Future of Religion and Belief Literacy: Reconnecting a Chain of Learning
- Notes
- References
- Index
Summary
This book brings together research and thinking over ten years about the relationship between religion and belief and the public sphere. It reflects my journey through three distinct phases. In the first, I wanted to open up the connections between religion and belief and public policy at a time when many were noticing how much policymakers were suddenly saying on a topic that had previously been marginal to the point of invisibility. In this, I had the experience of repeatedly coming up against a widespread lack of ability among policymakers to talk about religion and belief in the first place, despite much appetite to do so.
This necessitated a second phase – which was a sideways step in many ways – designed to address this deficit. In this stage, the notion of ‘religious literacy’ became central. This was a period of working out an approach through which actors and organisations could recover the ability to talk well about religion and belief, whatever their own particular stance. In this book, this has evolved into ‘religion and belief literacy’, as explained in the introduction.
After five years working to open up this idea, and to make it available to a policymaking audience, I have more recently returned to the bread and butter of exploring connections between religion and belief and public policy. This has included work on religion and belief in media, civil society and law but the main focus has been on the policies and practices framing schools, universities and professional training, especially in the area of health and social care. The book is an exploration of religion and belief in these learning spaces, examined through the lens of religion and belief literacy.
I have had the good fortune to work with many excellent colleagues in this area over the years, and I am especially grateful to Chris Baker, Beth Crisp, Grace Davie, Abby Day, Matthew Francis, Panagiotis Pentaris and Tim Stacey for their collegiality and hard work as we unpicked the issues together in various projects and fields. In this book, particular thanks are due to Martha Shaw and Alp Arat, who worked with me on reviews of the policy and literature, especially around religion and belief in workplaces (Alp) and schools (Martha).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Religion and Belief LiteracyReconnecting a Chain of Learning, pp. vii - viiiPublisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2020