Religion As Political Identity

The papers in this issue are mostly confined to the European area. Even in Europe, the heartland of secularism, the rise of political Islam and of nationalist Orthodoxy in postcommunist countries challenges the classic secular model. The picture that emerges from these papers is still blurred and ambiguous, but so is the reality at the present crossroads.

published in Vol 6 - No 2 - 2006 // Religion As Political Identity
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Indexed in:

  • Social Sciences Citation Index
    (ISI Thomson Reuters)
  • IPSA
  • GESIS
  • CIAONET
  • EBSCO
  • CEEOL
  • EPNET

International
Advisory Board

  • Alina Mungiu-Pippidi (chair) Hertie School of Governance
  • Larry Diamond Stanford University
  • Tom Gallagher University of Bradford
  • Alena Ledeneva University College London
  • Michael McFaul Stanford University
  • Dennis Deletant Georgetown University
  • Helen Wallace London School of Economics and Political Science

Editorial Board

  • Claudiu Tufiș
  • Bogdan Iancu
  • George Jiglau
  • Ingi Iusmen
  • Gabriel Bădescu
  • Andrei Macsut
  • Laura Voinea

Published by:

Societatea Academica Romana