Abstract:
Achieving ecologically sustainable societies necessitates fundamental social and cultural transformations. Religion has the potential to foster the required paradigm shifts in mindsets, behaviour and policy. Moreover, in many religious communities there is increasing engagement with questions of environment, climate change and ecological sustainability. This has led to an increasing corpus of literature engaging with the nexus between religion, environment, development and sustainability. The purpose of this article is to provide an overview of recent ecological trends in religious traditions as well as the literature on religion and sustainable development and on religion and ecology. While an ecological turn is evident in many religious communities and has been well documented in the literature, it emerges that more research is necessary on the way that this phenomenon manifests in environmental action at individual and institutional levels.
Description:
This article is a revised and augmented version of “Chapter 3: Religions and the Environment” in the Joint
Learning Initiative on Faith and Local Communities’ (JLIFLC) Report, The State of the Evidence in Religions
and Development (2022). Financial support by the JLIFLC for the original report is gratefully acknowledged.