1. The Globalizing Church and the Transnational Public Sphere: Inclusivity, Legitimacy, and Efficacy in a Pentecostal-Charismatic Organization.
- Author
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Manglos-Weber, Nicolette D.
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL organization ,GLOBALIZATION ,PENTECOST ,PENTECOSTALISM ,ETHNOLOGY ,PUBLIC sphere ,RELIGIOUS institutions - Abstract
Many scholars of the public sphere have recently turned to the question of how transnationalism--as both an increase in the prevalence and prominence of international organizations and in the numbers of people living between two or more nations--alters the relationship between the public and powerful actors. A parallel stream of research focuses on the role that religion can and should play in the public sphere. In this paper, I use transnational ethnographic data from a Pentecostal-Charismatic church organization originating in Ghana to explore a different possibility, specifically that globalizing religious organizations may themselves function as sectors of the public sphere, providing free and open spaces for a transnational public to engage in discourse on moral and political questions. In order to maintain the critical force of the public sphere concept, I follow Fraser (2007) in evaluating the evidence for political inclusivity, legitimacy, and efficacy in the formal and informal discourse within the organization. I find evidence of positive moves along all three of these dimensions, and argue that such organizations can indeed serve as important sectors of the transnational public sphere, but also highlight some of the inherent limits and tensions that hinder this development. There is real potential for such organizations to effect political change both directly and indirectly, but there are also significant theological and structural obstacles to them doing so. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016