1 Laicidad and religious diversity: themes in the debates on the regulation of religion in Latin America(Juan Marco Vaggione and José Manuel Morán Faúndes).- 2 Laicism: Exclusive or Inclusive?(Faviola Rivera Castro).- 3 Evangelicals within Contemporary Argentinean Politics: Logics and Political Actors around Sexual and Reproductive Rights( Daniel Eduardo Jones, Marcos Andrés Carbonelli and Santiago Luján Cunial).- 4 The Problem of the Plaza: Religious Freedom, Disestablishment and the Catholic Church in Latin America’s Public Square (Julieta Lemaitre).- 5 ‘It Takes Two to Tango’: The Religious and the Secular in Argentina’s Political Dance, 1860–1960 (Gustavo Morello).- 6 Poverty, Sexuality, and Human Rights: Pluralism or Hegemony? Discourse of the Peruvian Catholic Church on LGBT Human Rights within the City of Lima (Martín Jaime).- 7 Radiography of a Confessional State: The Religious Spectrum in Costa Rica (Laura Fuentes Belgrave).- 8 Laïcités in the Andean Sub-region. Laïcité, sexuality and reproduction in Bolivia and Ecuador’s constituent debates (Marco Huaco Palomino).- 9 Religious actors and discourses in the public sphere: controversies around sexual education in Argentina (Juan Cruz Esquivel).
Juan Marco Vaggione: Ph.D. in Sociology, New School for Social
Research and Doctorate in Law and Social Sciences, National
University of Cordoba. Independent Researcher of the National
Council of Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET-Argentina).
Professor of Sociology of Law at the National University of
Córdoba. His publications deal with sexual rights and the relation
between religion and sexual politics in Latin America.
José Manuel Morán Faúndes: Ph.D. in Latin American Social
Studies, National University of Córdoba. Post-doctoral fellow of
the National Council of Scientific and Technical Research
(CONICET-Argentina), Law and Social Research Centre. Professor of
Sociology of Law at the National University of Córdoba. He studies
the relationships between religious conservatism, sexual politics
and neoliberalism and Latin America, with emphasis on biopolitical
approaches.
“This volume seeks to contribute to the construction of bridges between the region’s own academic production and the English-speaking academic audience, in order to establish a critical dialogue that enriches comparative perspectives. ... The theme is far from exhausted, and with each turn of the screw, new variables come on the scene requiring new analysis and new looks. This book undoubtedly contributes to the broadening of our eyes on the vast and complex reality of Latin America.” (Edin Sued Abumanssur, International Journal of Latin American Religions. Vol. 1, 2017)
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