The terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, and since, have altered perceptions of religious change in Britain in the last century. This article proposes that three key trends encapsulate the most significant developments – secularization, the rise of religious militancy, and the evolution of the New Age. It seeks to refine the periodization and definitions of these, and the interconnections between them, focusing on gender as the major category of analysis, and using the demographic consequences of secularization to highlight the central role of women to British religious change from 1960 to 2000
The English 'sexual revolution' has recently become increasingly conceived as 'long', lasting many d...
Assuming that religion is socially relevant to the extent that it has influence on action, the artic...
International audienceThis article proposes a general model of analysis of the relations between rel...
The terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, and since, have altered perceptions of religious change ...
The terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, and since, have altered perceptions of religious change ...
BROWN Callum G. Religion and the demographic revolution : women and secularisation in Canada, Irelan...
ABSTRACT Women have outnumbered men as followers of Christianity at least since the transition to in...
This essay argues that essentialist models of modernity are always ideological, and that Britain’s d...
Major theories of secularisation have been gender blind, with the result that men's experience of mo...
Women have outnumbered men as followers of Christianity at least since the transition to industrial ...
The article analyses the problem of the definition of secularisation and its impact on our worldview...
This text challenges the generally held view that secularisation has been a long and gradual process...
European societies have experienced a decrease in the social importance of religious issues. Values ...
This edited volume is a comprehensive overview of women, gender and religious change in modern Brita...
This article explores the erosion of secular public culture in the UK and its implications for minor...
The English 'sexual revolution' has recently become increasingly conceived as 'long', lasting many d...
Assuming that religion is socially relevant to the extent that it has influence on action, the artic...
International audienceThis article proposes a general model of analysis of the relations between rel...
The terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, and since, have altered perceptions of religious change ...
The terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, and since, have altered perceptions of religious change ...
BROWN Callum G. Religion and the demographic revolution : women and secularisation in Canada, Irelan...
ABSTRACT Women have outnumbered men as followers of Christianity at least since the transition to in...
This essay argues that essentialist models of modernity are always ideological, and that Britain’s d...
Major theories of secularisation have been gender blind, with the result that men's experience of mo...
Women have outnumbered men as followers of Christianity at least since the transition to industrial ...
The article analyses the problem of the definition of secularisation and its impact on our worldview...
This text challenges the generally held view that secularisation has been a long and gradual process...
European societies have experienced a decrease in the social importance of religious issues. Values ...
This edited volume is a comprehensive overview of women, gender and religious change in modern Brita...
This article explores the erosion of secular public culture in the UK and its implications for minor...
The English 'sexual revolution' has recently become increasingly conceived as 'long', lasting many d...
Assuming that religion is socially relevant to the extent that it has influence on action, the artic...
International audienceThis article proposes a general model of analysis of the relations between rel...