Universities are being urged to think more carefully about the challenges of religion in a new âstimulus paperâ from the Leadership Foundation for Higher Education.
At a launch event last week at the London School of Economics, Tariq Modood, professor of sociology, politics and public policy at the University of Bristol, suggested that the secularist ideal of a separation of church and state was âsimplisticâ.
Faith was strong even among the student-age cohort in many growing immigrant communities where âreligion is not regarded as a purely private or spiritual matterâ.
âReligion has emerged as a full diversity issueâ alongside race, gender, sexual orientation and disability, said Professor Modood.
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âBut have universities really come to terms with it? Are there enough people within universities who understand religion and religious people?â he added.
His fellow author Craig Calhoun, director of the LSE, agreed that âwe get into a muddle if we think about religion as a purely private matterâ.
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âSome faculty members just donât see the extent of religion on our campuses and assume things are the same as they were in the 1970s.â
The discipline of international relations had managed to ignore religion until the 9/11 attack on the Twin Towers, said Professor Calhoun.
Religious voices and assumptions are inevitably part of the discussions around gender and sexuality, he pointed out, and should be welcomed into âdebates about common values or a possible higher purpose in politicsâ.
Such issues are analysed in greater depth in the academicsâ joint paper, Religion in Britain: Challenges for Higher Education.
Religion is widely acknowledged as a public good that can play âa significant role in relation to ethical voice, social well-being, cultural heritage, national ceremonies and national identity,â writes Professor Modood. This is reflected in âsome state-religion connections rather than strict separationâ right across Western Europe.
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Yet although âthe majority of university students say they are religiousâ, religiously committed groups and individuals remain âââforeignâ or strangers to many in higher educationâs leadership â at best a problem to be managed, not people to be sympathetically and empathetically understood and accommodatedâ.
Professor Calhoun takes up some of the policy implications for universities in his piece. When LSE created a new Faith Centre, he recalls, âfocus fell on the fact that the spaces for washing [required by Muslims] separated men and women â as though that wasnât also true of washrooms across the campusâ.
He also admits that âgender and sexuality are challenging issues for universities that struggle to combine respect for religion with clarity that a lack of respect or denigration based on gender or sexuality cannot be countenancedâ.
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Nonetheless, Professor Calhoun believes that universities should approach religion as âsomething that belongs in our intellectual discussions rather than an external factor with which we have to copeâ.
On some occasions, this may mean making religion âthe main focus of discussionâŠwithout exacerbating conflictsâ. At other times, religion should be incorporated into debates on other topics âwithout dominating or derailing the discussionâ.
While acknowledging that âmembers of minorities may need some level of in-group solidarity and recognitionâ, Professor Calhoun wants this to form âa basis for extending themselves into wider relationsâ.
Universities needed to be careful not to âreduce the learning they offer and the contribution they make to the larger societyâ by âaccept[ing] too much tacit segregation of students into subculturesâ, he said.
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