Description du livre
  
                           
                          
              
                               
In this book, Tale Steen-Johnsen explains how religious   peacebuilders are limited by both formal and more subtle political strategies   aimed at regulating civil society. Political authorities have a vested   interest in keeping social and religious movements under control, which   limits the opportunities religious leaders have to diminish violent conflicts   between religious groups. This volume offers empirical examples of these   connections in Ethiopia, Kenya, Zanzibar and Tanzania. It is valuable   resource for both scholars and development practitioners interested in how   politics and religion become conflated when religious actors engage to build   peace.