Building Coalitions from Shared Pieties

Polyvocal Religious Environmentalism at the Asian Rural Institute

Authors

  • Samantha Senda-Cook Creighton University
  • Emma Frances Bloomfield University of Nevada, Las Vegas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jsrnc.20381

Keywords:

piety, polyvocality, religious environmentalism, Christianity, coalition building

Abstract

The Asian Rural Institute (ARI) is a Christian organization based in Tochigi, Japan that emphasizes foodlife work (working to grow food to sustain life), servant leadership, and community development. In analyzing the experiences of ARI community members, we located three themes that encapsulate ARI’s negotiation of religious environmentalism: 1) hierarchy, 2) ritual, and 3) tensions. These themes create polyvocality, or multiple voices, which we argue builds coalitions among community members at ARI through shared values. In conversation with work on religious environmentalism, this essay positions Christianity as a coalition building resource for some environmental and social justice advocates. Furthermore, we demonstrate the capacity for coalition building among groups that share pieties rather than identity and illustrate how an organization can rhetorically mobilize and emphasize some parts of its identity to its advantage while remaining committed to all of its core values.

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Published

2023-03-28

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Senda-Cook, S., & Bloomfield, E. F. (2023). Building Coalitions from Shared Pieties: Polyvocal Religious Environmentalism at the Asian Rural Institute. Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, 17(1), 56–78. https://doi.org/10.1558/jsrnc.20381