World Religions and Spirituality Project
The World Religions and Spirituality Project publishes academic profiles of new and established religious movements, archive material related to some groups, and articles that provide context for the profiles. It is referenced by scholars, journalists, and human rights groups to provide a scholarly representation of threatened communities.
History
WRSP developed from Jeffrey K. Hadden's Religious Movements Homepage Project, which he founded in 1995. After Hadden's death in 2003, Douglas E. Cowan became Project Director. In 2007, it was described as "one of the largest information sites on new religious movements". In 2010, David G. Bromley became the Project Director. He expanded the scope of the project to recruit international scholars instead of local students and renamed it the World Religions and Spirituality Project.Purpose
In an article that discusses the challenge of teaching students about new religious movements, Douglas E. Cowan explains that, because of "the thousands of NRMs that exist in the world at any one time, only a relative handful are ever discussed in the various print resources, and the Internet is, by default, the only source of information available. The issue then becomes how credible the information is that they obtain online." Websites like CESNUR, the Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance, the Internet Sacred Text Archive, the Association of Religion Data Archives, and WRSP are understood as examples of websites that respond to this problem. These websites serve to popularize the new religious movements.Special projects
In addition to publishing profiles, it has ten special projects, thematic or regional, which are directed by recognized scholars.- Thematic Special Projects
- *Marian Apparitional and Devotional Groups
- **Joseph Laycock
- *Religious and Spiritual Movements and the Visual Arts
- **Massimo Introvigne
- *Spiritual and Visionary Communities
- **Timothy Miller
- *Women in the World's Religions and Spirituality Project
- **Rebecca Moore and Catherine Wessinger
- *Yoga in World Religions and Spiritualities
- **Suzanne Newcombe and Karen O'Brien-Kop
- Regional Special Projects
- *Australian Religious and Spiritual Traditions
- **Carole M. Cusack and Bernard Doherty
- *Canadian Religious and Spiritual Traditions
- **Susan Palmer and Hillary Kael
- *Japanese New Religions
- **Ian Reader, Erica Baffelli, and Birgit Staemmler
- *Religion and Spirituality in Russia and Eastern Europe
- **Kaarina Aitamurto and Maija Penttilä
- *Spiritual and Religious Traditions in Italy
- **Stefania Palmisano and Massimo Introvigne
- Local Special Projects
- *World Religions in Richmond
- **David G. Bromley
- *Student Research on North American Buddhist Communities
- **Kevin Vose
- *Arch City Religion
- **Rachel McBride Lindsey
- *A Journey through NYC Religions
- **Tony Carnes
- *Community Religious Project
- **Melanie Prideaux
- *Religious Diversity in New Orleans
- **Timothy Cahill
- *World Religions in Arizona
- **David Damrel
- *The Religious Landscape in Orlando, Florida
- **Yudit D. Greenberg and Arnold Wettstein
- *Portland Muslim History Project
- **Kambiz GhaneaBassiri
- *Buddhism in Virginia Beach
- **Steven Emmanuel
- *New Vrindaban Project
- **Greg Emery
- *Hindu and Jain Communities in North Texas
- **Pankaj Jain
- *The Changing Religious Landscape of Atlanta, Georgia
- **Gary Laderman
- *Buddhist, Hindu, Jain, Muslim, and Sikh Religious Centers in Atlanta
- **Kathryn McClymond
- *Mapping Post-1965 Immigrant Religious Communities in Northern Ohio
- **David Odell-Scott and Surinder Bhawdwaj
- *Pluralism in the "Bible Belt": Mapping the Religious Diversity of South Georgia
- **Michael Stoltzfus
- *Religious Diversity in Upstate South Carolina
- **Claude Stulting and Sam Britt