Embracing a Multipolar World: Management and Organization Scholars and Varieties of Socialism
Abstract Despite the evolution to a multipolar economic world during the past three decades, management and organization scholars around the world still largely employ a capitalist view from the United States as the normal state, with scholars analysing other economic contexts as some variation of such capitalism.
Garry D. Bruton +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Cultivating an Eschatological Imaginary: A Liturgical Approach to Death. [PDF]
Tenorio AS.
europepmc +1 more source
Of Carcasses and Christ: Rereading the Repugnant Ecological Other
ABSTRACT This essay claims that a collection of hunting and fishing devotionals provincializes a common trope in environmental literatures: the figure of the repugnantly anti‐ecological conservative Protestant. A close reading of these texts reveals their authors’ and ideal audiences’ extensive knowledge of land and animal minds, which deflates their ...
Colin B. Weaver
wiley +1 more source
Democratic Deterrence of Middle Powers in Great Power Rivalry: The Case for Indonesia. [PDF]
Purboadji A.
europepmc +1 more source
Evangelization and Interreligious Dialogue: Compatible Parts of Christian Mission? - 2010 [PDF]
Phan, Peter C.
core +4 more sources
Mobilising Zionist and philo-Semitic sentiments through melodrama: Brazilian biblical telenovelas in the production of a neo-Pentecostal political culture. [PDF]
Carpenedo M.
europepmc +1 more source
Immigrants’ Changing Religiosity: The Case of Spain
ABSTRACT This article analyzes changes in religiosity of the migrant–origin population in Spain. Using data from the Spanish General Social Survey (ESGE) from four different years between 2013 and 2023, we compare people with migrant background with respect to the native‐born population in terms of religious affiliation (vs.
Jacobo Muñoz‐Comet +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Revisiting the classics on secularization theory. [PDF]
Gülalp H.
europepmc +1 more source
Differences in Religious Attendance Among Disabled and Nondisabled Early and Early Midlife Adults
ABSTRACT In general, disabled people value religion as much as people without disability, but do not attend religious services as often. Empirical evidence to date does not robustly examine whether this pattern is applicable even when accounting for possible differences in religiosity among disabled and nondisabled people. Using data from the 2011−2019
Scott D. Landes, Katie Mueller
wiley +1 more source
On Religious Influence in Bioethics: The Limits of Pluriversalism. [PDF]
Spitale G +14 more
europepmc +1 more source

