
Contents
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Innovation in the Global Diaspora: The Case of California Ghadar Movement Innovation in the Global Diaspora: The Case of California Ghadar Movement
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The Impact of Globalism: The Case of the Khalistani Movement The Impact of Globalism: The Case of the Khalistani Movement
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Thinking About Sikhism Globally Thinking About Sikhism Globally
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Bibliography Bibliography
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31 Global Sikhism
Get accessMark Juergensmeyer is a professor of sociology and global studies, the Kundan Kaur Kapany Chair of Global and Sikh Studies, and a fellow and founding director of the Orfalea Center for Global and International Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is the author or editor of thirty books on global religion and religious violence, including the award-winning Terror in the Mind of God: The Global Rise of Religious Violence, named by the Washington Post a notable book of the year.
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Published:13 January 2014
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Abstract
Sikhism, like all religious traditions, is undergoing changes in an era of globalization. It was for years a regional religion in South Asia, and then became a world religion in the Sikh diaspora. It is now becoming a global religion where the global Sikh diaspora affects politics in South Asia, and where the Sikh community in South Asia is affected by transnational trends in global affairs. The early twentieth-century Ghadar movement of diaspora Sikhs is an example of the former, and the late twentieth-century Khalistani movement of Sikh separatism is an example of the latter. The transnational Sikh community continues to evolve in the multicultural world of the twenty-first century.
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