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Seminar on Religion, Conflict and Its Aftermath

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The Cambridge Seminar on Religion, Conflict and Its Aftermath first met in June 2006. Its participants come from a range of university departments and disciplines, from History, International Studies, Politics and Divinity to Psychology and Archaeology. Work presented at the Seminar encompasses a range of topics outside the narrowest focus on religion as a motive for conflict, giving broadly equal treatment to religion in conflict situations, the impact of religion on conflicts, and post-conflict reconciliation and memory. In keeping with the varied interests of its participants, the Seminar engages with the impact of violence outside the war convention, particularly with respect to genocide and the use of force by non-state actors. Work presented at the Seminar will also treat comparable secular practices, norms, ideologies and communities in wartime and in the aftermath of war.

The Seminar forms a part of the broader work of the Post-Conflict and Post-Crisis Reconstruction Research Group, a network which links Seminar participants to a number of ongoing research projects focusing on religion and the aftermath of conflicts in the world today.

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If you have a question about this list, please contact: Dr George R. Wilkes. If you have a question about a specific talk, click on that talk to find its organiser.

0 upcoming talks and 3 talks in the archive.

Policy-Making, Religion and Conflict-Prone Settings in the US and EU

UserLiora Danan (Yale).

HouseTo be confirmed.

ClockThursday 26 June 2008, 13:00-14:00

Faith, politics and peace in Northern Ireland

UserDr. Graham Spencer, University of Portsmouth, and Dr. David Herbert, Open University.

HouseSt Edmunds College, Okinaga Room (Tower).

ClockThursday 19 June 2008, 14:00-16:00

Religion and Policy-Making in Post-Conflict Situations

UserStacey Gutkowski (CIS).

HouseCRASSH, 17 Mill Lane, Cambridge.

ClockTuesday 10 June 2008, 13:30-15:30

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