
Published online:
20 June 2013
Published in print:
25 July 2008
Online ISBN:
9780804763158
Print ISBN:
9780804758642
Contents
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Religion and Politics: Competing and Coalescing Conceptualizations Religion and Politics: Competing and Coalescing Conceptualizations
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The Conflict Model The Conflict Model
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The Crisis Model The Crisis Model
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The Choice-centric Models The Choice-centric Models
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Politics of Religion in Israel and Turkey Politics of Religion in Israel and Turkey
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Basic Terms Revisited Basic Terms Revisited
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Religion Religion
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Secularism Secularism
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Religious Politics Religious Politics
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The Nexus of Religion and Politics The Nexus of Religion and Politics
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Religion in State Religion in State
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Power Sharing and Political Contestation Power Sharing and Political Contestation
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The Symbolic Capital of Religious Ideologies The Symbolic Capital of Religious Ideologies
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Chapter
One Politics of Religion: Competing and Coalescing Conceptualizations
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Pages
33–64
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Published:July 2008
Cite
Tepe, Sultan, 'Politics of Religion: Competing and Coalescing Conceptualizations', Beyond Sacred and Secular: Politics of Religion in Israel and Turkey (Redwood City, CA , 2008; online edn, Stanford Scholarship Online, 20 June 2013), https://doi.org/10.11126/stanford/9780804758642.003.0002, accessed 17 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter, which examines the competing and coalescing conceptualizations in politics and religion in Israel and Turkey, lays out the intellectual foundation for this study and the reasoning behind its conceptual language, and considers the arguments of several scholars, including Emile Durkheim, Max Weber, and Peter Berger. It explores the three areas of interaction that affect religious politics, including the political position and capacity of religion, the rules of power sharing and political contestation, and the symbolic capital of religious ideologies.
Keywords:
politics, religion, Israel, Turkey, Emile Durkheim, Max Weber, Peter Berger, religious politics, power sharing, political contestation
Subject
Comparative Politics
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