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Religion & Theology · Library
Religion and theology as an applied-and-academic humanities discipline covers the systematic study of religious traditions, beliefs, practices, texts, institutions, and the broader sacred-and-spiritual dimensions of human cultures. The discipline operates institutionally through both dedicated religious-studies departments at secular universities (the academic-study-of-religion approach, with comparative-religions and history-of-religions methodology) and dedicated theology programs at religious-affiliated institutions (with confessional-theological-formation orientation training clergy and religious-leaders). The post-19th-century emergence of secular religious-studies as distinct from confessional theology has produced two parallel-but-overlapping institutional traditions.\n\nThe global religious-studies-and-theology institutional landscape includes both secular religious-studies departments and confessional theology programs. Secular religious-studies departments: Harvard Divinity School (the substantial mixed religious-studies-and-theology institution), the University of Chicago Divinity School (the foundational secular religious-studies tradition through Mircea Eliade and the broader history-of-religions program), Yale Divinity, Princeton Department of Religion, UCLA Department of Religious Studies, UC Santa Barbara, the substantial Stanford Department of Religious Studies, plus the broader 100+ secular-religious-studies departments at major US universities. In the UK: the Cambridge Faculty of Divinity, Oxford's Faculty of Theology and Religion, the SOAS Department of the Study of Religions (the principal UK department for non-Western religious studies), KCL, the Birmingham theology-and-religion department, Durham, Edinburgh, Manchester. In Continental Europe: the substantial German theological-faculty tradition (Heidelberg, Tübingen, Marburg, Munich, Berlin), the Vatican-affiliated Pontifical universities, the École Pratique des Hautes Études Paris religious-studies tradition. In India: the substantial Indian religious-studies infrastructure at JNU Centre for the Study of Religions, the Department of Religious Studies at major Indian universities (Delhi University, Visva-Bharati, BHU, Madras), the substantial Indian theological-seminary network (Christian, Islamic, Hindu Vedic, Buddhist, Jain, Sikh seminaries with substantial 19th-and-20th-century history through institutions like Bishop's College Calcutta founded 1820, Serampore College founded 1818, the Jamia Millia Islamia Department of Islamic Studies, the substantial Vedic-school-and-pathshala network), the Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts religious-studies engagement.\n\nIndia's religious-traditions infrastructure has structural depth given the country's status as the birthplace of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism, the substantial Indian-Islamic-tradition (with the world's second-largest Muslim population at ~200+ million), the substantial Indian-Christian-tradition (with the Saint Thomas Christian tradition dating from the 1st century plus the substantial post-Vasco-da-Gama Catholic-and-Protestant traditions), the substantial Indian-Zoroastrian (Parsi) and Jewish-Indian (Bene Israel, Cochin Jews) communities. The substantial post-2010 expansion of Indian religious-studies-and-theology research plus the broader Indian-religion-in-public-life discussion through 2014-2024.\n\nThe major sub-areas of contemporary academic religious-studies: history of religions, comparative religions, philosophy of religion (the substantial overlap with neglect-root-philosophy), sociology of religion, anthropology of religion (the substantial overlap with human-root-anthropology), religious-textual studies (Biblical studies, Qur'anic studies, Vedic studies, Buddhist-and-Jain-textual studies, Sikh scriptural studies), psychology of religion, religious ethics, the substantial post-2010 emergence of religion-and-science discourse plus the broader religion-and-public-policy-and-cultural-studies work.\n\nThe applied religious-studies-and-theology professional practice covers academic-research-faculty positions, religious-leader-training-and-clergy-formation through theological seminaries, religious-organisation administration (the substantial post-2010 employment of religious-studies graduates in religious-NGOs, charitable-organisations, religious-publishing), religious-journalism and writing, museum-curatorial work at religious-art-and-archaeology collections (the substantial Vatican Museums, the British Museum collections, the Indian Museum and substantial Indian religious-art collections), interfaith-dialogue work, the substantial post-2020 expansion of religion-and-AI-and-religion-and-public-policy work.\n\nFor a globally-mobile religious-studies professional, the academic-research-track is uniformly cross-jurisdictionally mobile but the religious-affiliation-and-confessional-context can affect institutional-mobility patterns.\n\nCross-references: religion intersects with academy-humanities, neglect-root-philosophy, human-root-anthropology, human-root-classics, human-root-mythology, paper-root-psych, the broader cultural-and-policy ecosystem.
Library categories most relevant to Religion & Theology, ranked by topical overlap.
- Library: Paper Archives
Academic and policy paper archives — SSRN, NBER, CEPR, VoxEU, RePEc.
Relevance score: 6 - Library: Corridors
37 major trade corridors — IMEC, BRI, Northern Distribution Network, Pacific trade routes.
Relevance score: 4 - International Banks
Tier-1 international banks by country with correspondent-network depth and expat access.
Relevance score: 4 - Library: Conferences
Global conference calendar — WEF Davos, UN GA, COP, Munich Security, Shangri-La Dialogue.
Relevance score: 4 - Library: Speakers Bureaus
Professional speaker bureaus for trade, economics, policy, geopolitics topics.
Relevance score: 4 - Library: Cities
City intelligence — 2,398 cities across 204 countries with tier-matched depth.
Relevance score: 2 - Library: Countries
Deep factsheets on 197 countries — economic, legal, trade, cultural, logistical.
Relevance score: 2 - Library: HS Codes
Harmonized System codes 1-97 with sub-heading depth — the primary tariff classification reference.
Relevance score: 2 - Library: Trade Blocs
28 major trade blocs — EU, ASEAN, USMCA, MERCOSUR, AfCFTA, RCEP, CPTPP.
Relevance score: 2 - Accounting Firms
Big-4 (Deloitte, EY, KPMG, PwC), BDO, Grant Thornton, national network firms.
Relevance score: 2 - Bilateral Investment Treaties
BITs — foreign investor protection, ISDS availability, notable cases, termination status.
Relevance score: 2 - Chambers of Commerce
National chambers — FICCI, CII, ASSOCHAM, USCIB, JETRO, equivalent bodies globally.
Relevance score: 2 - Export Incentives Index
Complete reference of export-incentive programs — RoDTEP, DBK, MEIS, IEIS, ECGC.
Relevance score: 2 - Import Duties
Applied duty rates including GST/VAT/cess overlays by country and product.
Relevance score: 2 - Library: Arbitration Centers
Complete registry of commercial arbitration centers globally with rules and case caseload.
Relevance score: 2 - Library: Award Programs
Industry award programs — Nobel, Pulitzer, Queen's Award for Enterprise, Red Dot.
Relevance score: 2 - Library: Central Banks
Complete list of central banks globally with websites, contact, governance structure.
Relevance score: 2 - Library: Competition Authorities
FTC, DOJ Antitrust, EC DG COMP, CMA UK, CCI India, FCC Japan — competition agencies.
Relevance score: 2 - Library: Dataset Catalog
Open datasets catalog — World Bank, IMF, OECD, UN, Eurostat, national statistics.
Relevance score: 2 - Port Directory
Global port directory — 500+ major commercial ports with handling capacity, routes.
Relevance score: 2
13,940 reference PDFs
The full AJG Library contains 13,940 primary-source reference PDFs across regulations, trade policy, central bank reports, tariff schedules, and more. Browse all →
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