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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Conversion as Negotiation. Converts as Actors of Civil Society

Katrin Langewiesche

subject

Civil societyScrutinyReligious valueslcsh:BL1-2790media_common.quotation_subject0507 social and economic geography0603 philosophy ethics and religion050701 cultural studieslcsh:Religions. Mythology. RationalismPower (social and political)social engagementPolitical scienceBurkina Fasofaith-based NGOconversionmedia_common060303 religions & theology05 social sciencesReligious studies06 humanities and the artsSocial mobilitySocial engagementSolidarityNegotiationPolitical economyAhmadiyyaFrance

description

This article focuses on the religious movement of the Ahmadiyya and its civil society organization, Humanity First, in West-Africa and in Europe. Particular attention is paid to the place of converts within these two institutions. Conversions to an Islamic minority and the actions of this minority are studied through the prism of social commitment. I examine the intersections between religious values, the ideas of solidarity in the societies under scrutiny and, the kaleidoscopic range of Muslim charities. The paper investigates conversion as negotiation in regard to gender, social mobility, and power. Conversion is approached here as a matter of social relations and not personal belief. I argue that converts have to use various strategies of recognition, either as individuals or as a group, which places them in a permanent state of negotiation with their entourage.

10.3390/rel11070322http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel11070322