What are the relationships among human beings and what are variously understood by the terms religion, nature, and culture? What constitutes ethically appropriate relationships between our own species and the places, including the entire biosphere, which we inhabit?
The Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, which has been published quarterly since 2007, explores through the social and natural sciences the complex relationships among human beings, their diverse ‘religions’ (broadly and diversely defined) and the earth’s living systems, while providing a venue for analysis and debate over what constitutes an ethically appropriate relationship between our own species and the environments we inhabit.
More information about the JSRNC, including editorial information, how to submit, past article samples, and current special issue calls, can be accessed via the Journal dropdown menu above.
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Latest Issue
- Finding Space for Advocacy and Scholarship on Mauna Kea and Beyond
- Sarah Renee Werner, Rooted Faith: Practices for Living Well on a Fragile Planet
- Louise Fowler-Smith, Sacred Trees of India: Adornment and Adoration as an Alternative to the Commodification of Nature
- Patrick Curry, Art and Enchantment: How Wonder Works
- Katri Ratia, Alternative Spirituality, Counterculture, and European Rainbow Gatherings: Pachamama, I’m Coming Home
- Jean Chamel and Yael Dansac (eds.), Relating with More-than-Humans: Interbeing Rituality in a Living World
- Frances Knight and Ebenezer Howard, Inventor of the Garden City
- James D. Nations, Lacandón Maya in the Twenty-First Century: Indigenous Knowledge and Conservation in Mexico’s Tropical Rainforest