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Journal Article

Sacred welcomes: How religious reasons, structures, and interactions shape refugee advocacy and settlement

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Boudou,  Benjamin
Ethics, Law and Politics, MPI for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Boudou, B., Leaman, H., & Scholz, M. M. (2021). Sacred welcomes: How religious reasons, structures, and interactions shape refugee advocacy and settlement. Migration and Society, 4(1), 99-109. doi:10.3167/arms.2021.040110.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0008-4BF4-1
Abstract
This special section explores the role of religious ideas and religious associations in shaping the response of states and non-state actors to asylum-seekers and refugees. It brings together insights from anthropology, law, history, and political theory to enrich our understanding of how religious values and resources are mobilized to respond to refugees and to circumvent usual narratives of secularization. Examining these questions within multicultural African, European, and North American contexts, the special section argues that religion provides moral reasons and structural support to welcome and resettle refugees, and constitutes a framework of analysis to better understand the social, legal, and political dynamics of inclusion and exclusion in contexts of migration.