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Sacred Economies - by Nicolette Manglos-Weber (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- How Uganda's vibrant religious infrastructure supports local and interfaith community care efforts For millions living on the African continent, the experience of poverty is a facet of life.
- About the Author: Nicolette Manglos-Weber is Associate Professor of Religion and Society at Boston University's School of Theology.
- 248 Pages
- Social Science, Sociology of Religion
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Book Synopsis
How Uganda's vibrant religious infrastructure supports local and interfaith community care efforts
For millions living on the African continent, the experience of poverty is a facet of life. While many scholars, activists, and policy experts work in African communities to mitigate poverty, they often miss a crucial dimension of contemporary African life--religion and religious practice. In Sacred Economies, scholar Nicolette Manglos-Weber with her colleague Josephine Nabakooza investigate how and why religion matters to the ways in which people take care of their material needs. Using interviews, focus groups, and sociological portraits of four local leaders in Uganda, Manglos-Weber and Nabakooza show how Uganda's vibrant religious infrastructure supports local and interfaith community care efforts. Manglos-Weber ultimately argues that participation in Christian and Islamic congregations, as a model of religious life, generates a robust infrastructure of economic patronage and support. She also finds that this shared dynamic drives interfaith cooperation between local faith groups.
In telling this story, Sacred Economies drives the study of congregations in new directions, demonstrating how religious congregations function differently around the world. Manglos-Weber's analysis prompts a closer look at the grassroots and unofficial religious aspects that emerge from congregational life and are often missed in scholarly studies of global religion and politics. She also challenges the de facto secularism of neoliberal development--revealing how economic activity and faith are intertwined in a postcolonial context. Sacred Economies challenges both scholars and development practitioners to understand the sacred dimensions of community care as a force for social good.
Review Quotes
"Through her sensitive ethnography, Nicolette D. Manglos-Weber presents a nuanced study of providers of community care, showing how they allow support beyond clan boundaries and illuminating a crucial aspect of Ugandan society."-- "China Scherz, University of Notre Dame"
About the Author
Nicolette Manglos-Weber is Associate Professor of Religion and Society at Boston University's School of Theology.
Josephine Nabakooza is a freelance research consultant and the Community Outreach Coordinator at Bethany Land Institute, Uganda.