ABSTRACT

Investigating the role played by religious actors in sociopolitical issues as a manifestation of the invisible politics of religion, this book concentrates on the social economy, support to migrants, the fight against social exclusion and pacifist campaigns, where religious actors have played discreet but structuring roles.

In the European context, politico-religious matters have been reduced in two ways: first, a reduction of identity with religion being transformed into a heritage in the form of a minimal sense of belonging; and second, the media focus on the most fundamentalist currents within all religions. This book responds by proposing an alternative perspective with a focus on Southern European Catholicism and a comparison between Italian, Spanish and French subnational territories. In a period of polarized relations between religion and politics, there is a Catholic action repertoire which avoids this binary confrontation and which, in contrast, is characterized by its mediating dimension. The Catholic mediation repertoire receives little publicity and is expressed in a discreet but structuring way to address different public problems.

An important contribution to the literature, this book will interest scholars and upper-level students working on religion and politics, mediation and peace studies, local policy making and comparative approaches to Southern European society and politics.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|23 pages

The politics of Catholic mediations

Analytical framework

chapter 2|37 pages

Norms, rules and practices

The cornerstones of plural Catholic mediation

chapter 3|49 pages

The entrepreneurial repertoire

Between moralizing capitalism and solidarity alternatives

chapter 4|39 pages

The repertoire of subsidiarity

The social and political work of Catholic actors in response to the economic crisis

chapter 5|51 pages

The repertoire of hospitality

Catholic mobilizations and politicizations of the migration issue

chapter 6|47 pages

The repertoire of peace

Catholic mediation and violent political conflicts