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April 2010: Notre Dame University, the University of
Chicago and Union College are among a string of
educational institutions selected to receive grant money
to conduct research on the growing
Pentecostal-charismatic movement.
The Center for Religion and Civic Culture at the
University of Southern California (USC) will award five
centers and 16 individual scholars and their teams a
total of $3.5 million for research.
USC's research initiative is supported by a grant from
the John Templeton Foundation. The university received
close to 500 applications from researchers around the
world.
Kimon Sargeant, vice president of human services for the
foundation, said Pentecostalism is "one of the most
dynamic and potentially transformative religious
movements" in this century.
"The researchers selected for the Pentecostal and
Charismatic Research Initiative have a unique
opportunity to help scholars and the broader public
understand how this movement-inspired by powerful
worship and religious experience-is changing the
cultural, social and religious landscape around the
world," Kamon said.
Grant recipients, who represent educational institutions
in 23 countries, will conduct research in Asia, Africa,
Latin America or the former Soviet Union.
Philip Jenkins, professor of history and religious
studies at Pennsylvania State University, said observers
have recognized the significance of Pentecostal and
charismatic Christianity for years. But he said the
movement has never received the recognition it deserves.
"The topic has never received the attention it deserves
in the academy as a whole, and especially in teaching,"
Jenkins said.
Grant applications were evaluated by an
interdisciplinary team of scholars and are awarded on a
competitive basis. Recipients of regional center grants
can receive up to $500,000 over a two-year period and
recipients of individual grants can receive up to
$100,000 in funding.
Professor Donald Miller, executive director of the
Center for Religion and Civic Culture at USC, said
Pentecostals and charismatics are shifting the momentum
of Christianity from the Western world to the Southern
Hemisphere.
"Some of the most creative faith-based programs in the
world are being developed by fast growing Pentecostal
and charismatic congregations-both Protestant and
Catholic," he said.
The grant recipients are:
Regional Center Grants
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Jeannette Aguilar, University of Central America in
El Salvador (El Salvador), and Richard Wood,
University of New Mexico: "The Impact of the
Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements on Local
Community Organizations and Civic Participation in
Central America"
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Zainal Abidin Bagir, Center for Religions and
Cross-Cultural Studies (Indonesia): "Pentecostal
Growth and Social Relations in Indonesia"
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Umar Danfulani, Musa Gaiya, Yusuf Turaki, and Danny
McCain, University of Jos (Nigeria): "Nigeria
Pentecostal and Charismatic Research Centre "
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Alexander Panchenko, European University at St.
Petersburg (Russia), and Patrick Plattet, University
of Alaska, Fairbanks: "Center for the Study of
Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements in Russia"
Individual and Team Grants
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Febe Armanios, Middlebury College: "Coptic
Charismatic Renewal in Egypt: A Modern History”
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Chad Bauman, Butler University: "Pentecostals,
Charismatics, Conversion and Hindu-Christian
Conflict in Contemporary India"
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Karen Brison, Union College: "A Cosmopolitan
Ethnography of Global Pentecostal Networks: the View
from Fiji"
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Graham K. Brown, University of Bath (U.K.), Center
for Development Studies: "Theological Resources,
Ethnic Boundaries, and Civil Society: A Case Study
of Charismatic Churches in Kuala Lampur, Malaysia "
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Richard Burgess, University of Birmingham (U.K.),
Centre of Pentecostal and Charismatic Studies:
"Pentecostal Spiritualities, Inter-Religious
Relations and Civic Engagement: A Comparative Study
of Nigeria and Zambia"
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Robert Dowd, University of Notre Dame: "The Roman
Catholic Charismatic Movement in Sub-Saharan Africa:
Its Causes and Consequences"
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Henri Gooren, Oakland University: "The
Pentecostalization of Religion and Society in
Paraguay and Chile"
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Gordon Hanson, University of California, San Diego,
and Chong Xiang, Purdue University: "The Global
Marketplace for Christianity"
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Andrew Johnson, University of Minnesota: "Religion
Behind Bars: Pentecostalism in Brazilian Prison and
the Social Consequences of Religious Prisoners"
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William Kay, Glyndwr University (U.K.): "Asian
Pentecostal-style Church Growth: An International
Comparative Project"
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Karrie Koesel, University of Oregon: "Where Faith
Thrives: The Rise of Pentecostal and Charismatic
Christianity in Russia and China"
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John McCauley, University of California, Los
Angeles: "Pentecostal-Charismatic Christianity and
the African Political Landscape"
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Robin Shoaps, University of Chicago: "Making a
Religious Difference: Communicative Ecology and
Conversion in Two Maya Communities"
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Daniel Jordan Smith, Brown University:
Pentecostalism and AIDS in Nigeria
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Timothy Wadkins, Canisius College, Institute for the
Global Study of Religion: "The Preferential Option
for the Spirit: Pentecostalism and Culture in Modern
El Salvador
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Jiexia (Elisa) Zhai, Miami University, and J. Gordon
Melton, Institute for the Study of American
Religion: "The Spread of the Chinese Indigenous
Pentecostal and Charismatic Movement in the East
Asian Chinese Community: the Case of the True Jesus
Church”
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