Team book projects at the CSRS are based on a methodology developed by founding centre director, Harold Coward. In this unique model of research, interdisciplinary teams of investigators participate in an extended process of collaborative writing and critique leading to the publication of highly integrated academic volumes. The projects normally involve two research meetings over a period of eighteen to twenty-four months. As part of this distinctive research process, authors are expected to reference one another in their chapters. The overall result is a cohesive volume that challenges both authors and readers to consider common areas of understanding across disciplinary boundaries.
Topics for the CSRS book projects are normally selected in response to current and emerging issues of interest to society; as such, the projects typically incorporate participants from government, the professions, community organizations, and a variety of academic disciplines.
The following snapshots provide information about the CSRS's current research-in-progress and published books after research.
Opening and Closing Relations: Indigenous Spirituality in Canada
Research Duration: 2018 - Present Research in progress
Sponsor/Funder: CSRS support from the royalties generated by the first two volumes of the Religion and Ethnicity in Canada research project, also published with the University of Toronto Press. This will be the third and final volume of the project. (Bramadat, Principal Editor)
In the Press: University of Toronto Press
Editors: Paul Bramadat (UVic), John Borrows (UVic), Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark (UVic), and David Seljak (Universiy of Waterloo)
Status: Under contract. Authors from across Canada – most of whom are Indigenous – are preparing their chapters in advance of our second team meeting, in 2021 (first meeting took place in December 2018).
Research Duration: 2017 - 2022 (watch the video ).
Aim: An interdisciplinary team of scholars collaborate to investigate the nature and implications of the distinctive religious patterns evident in the “Cascadia” region of North America.
Big Questions: 1) How inclusive is Cascadia to newcomers from non-European and non-Christian societies; 2) What are the differences between Canadian and American expressions of this form of religion/spirituality?; and 3) What are the public implications of growth in this form of religion/spirituality?
Investigator: Paul Bramadat (UVic)
Sponsor/Funder: Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight Grant (Bramadat, PI)
In the Press: Radio segment on CBC Tapestry
Editors: Paul Bramadat (Principal Editor), Patricia O’Connell Killen (Gonzaga University and Pacific Lutheran University), and Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme (University of Waterloo)
Status: Published 2022
Public Health in the Age of Anxiety: Religious and Cultural Roots of Vaccine Hesitancy in Canada
Editors: Paul Bramadat (principal editor), Maryse Guay (University of Sherbrooke), Julie Bettinger (UBC), Réal Roy (番茄社区)
Press: University of Toronto Press
Status: Published 2017
Funding: Réseau de recherche en santé des populations du Québec (RSPQ), Université de Sherbrooke, UVic (CSRS)
Religious Radicalization and Secularization in Canada and Beyond
Editors: Paul Bramadat and Lorne Dawson (University of Waterloo)
Press: University of Toronto Press
Status: Published 2014
Funding: Public Safety Canada and Defence Research and Development Canada
Aim: Experts from the health disciplines, humanities, and social sciences work together to understand the growing anxieties related to vaccines.
Investigators: Paul Bramadat (UVic), Maryse Guay (University of Sherbrooke), Julie Bettinger (UBC), Réal Roy (UVic), eds.
Sponsor/Funder: Réseau de recherche en santé des populations du Québec (RSPQ), Université de Sherbrooke, UVic CSRS.
Big Question: What do we know about why members of some religious and cultural groups are reluctant to vaccinate themselves and their children? How might physicians, nurses, scholars, and public health specialists better relate to these concerns about vaccine safety in order to prevent serious outbreaks of diseases?
Status: Published by University of Toronto Press, 2017. Purchase .
Investigators: Paul Bramadat (UVic CSRS), Harold Coward (UVic, CSRS), and Kelli Stajduhar (UVic School of Nursing/Centre on Aging)
Sponsor/Funder: Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Big Questions: This groundbreaking book addresses the spiritual aspect of hospice care for those who do not fit easily within traditional religious beliefs and categories. A companion volume to Religious Understandings of a Good Death in Hospice Palliative Care, this work also advocates for renewed attention to the spiritual, the often overlooked element of hospice care. Drawing on data from clinical case studies, new sociological research, and the perspectives of agnostics, atheists, those who emphasize the spiritual rather than institutional dimensions of a traditional religion, and the rapidly growing cohort of those who describe themselves as spiritual-but-not-religious, the contributors to this volume interpret the shift from predominantly Christian-based pastoral services to a new approach to “the spiritual” shaped by the increasing diversity of Western societies and new understandings of the nature of secular society.
Status: Book published by SUNY Press, 2013. Purchase .
Designer Animals: Mapping the Issues in Animal Biotechnology
Investigator: Conrad Brunk (UVic CSRS) and Sarah Hartley (Simon Fraser University)
Sponsor/Funder: Advanced Foods and Materials Network
Big Questions: Designer Animals is an in-depth study of the debates surrounding the development of animal biotechnology, which is quickly emerging out of the laboratory and into the commercial marketplace. This book innovatively combines expert analysis on the technology's economic, professional, ethical, and religious implications while remaining firmly grounded in the 'real world' political environment in which the issue is played out. By investigating the interests of major stakeholders, including researchers on the cutting edge of science; mainstream and 'alternative' agriculture organizations; the animal welfare movement; and health care providers, patients, and researchers, the contributors illuminate the most important points of agreement and disagreement on this hotly contested topic.
Status: Book published by University of Toronto Press, 2012. Purchase .
Religious Understandings of a “Good Death” in Hospice Palliative Care
Investigators: Harold Coward (UVic, CSRS), and Kelli Stajduhar (UVic School of Nursing/Centre on Aging)
Sponsor/Funder: Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Big Questions: This book explores how religious understandings of death are experienced in hospice care. Aspects of the early hospice model that stressed attention to the religious dimensions of death and dying, while still recognized and practiced, have developed outside the purview of academic inquiry and consideration. Meanwhile, global migration and multicultural diversification in the West have dramatically altered the profile of contemporary hospice care. In response to these developments, this volume is the first to critically explore how religious understandings of death are manifested and experienced in palliative care settings. Contributors discuss how a “good death” is conceived within the major religious traditions of Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Judaism, Buddhism, Chinese religion, and Aboriginal spirituality. This book won the 2012 AJN (American Journal of Nursing) Book of the Year Award in the Hospice and Palliative Care category.
Status: Book published by SUNY Press, 2012. Purchase .
Sponsor/Funder: Citizenship and Immigration Canada, Citizenship and Multiculturalism Branch
Big Questions: In this project we explore the relationship between Canadian citizenship and the four religious traditions most commonly involved in public and political debates: Islam, Christianity, Sikhism and Judaism. In the popular, political and even academic literature, assertions about these four traditions (or religion in general) often conform to one of two approaches: either religions are framed as ahistorical bastions of truth, beauty and goodness (with all errors, ugliness and evil attributed to “hijacked” or inauthentic versions), or they are framed as solely historical, manipulative and intransigent obstacles to the full maturation of western societies (with all truth, beauty, and goodness treated as accidental expressions of universal cultural values). As the four chapters of this project demonstrate, the situation is far more complicated – and interesting – than these two dominant and equally inadequate approaches to religion would lead one to think.
Status: A collection of original reports (word count: 70,000) on definitions of and debates about citizenship in four major Canadian traditions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Sikhism), featuring four scholars; edited and introduced by Paul Bramadat; final report submitted to Citizenship and Immigration Canada, 2011