Regulating Religious Coexistence
The Intricacies of Interfaith Cooperation in Coastal Kenya
Erik Meinema(Author)
Ohio University Press
Will be published approx. on 22. September 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
276 pages
978-0-8214-2707-1 (ISBN)
Description
Regulating Religious Coexistence offers a compelling ethnographic analysis of how Muslims, Christians, and practitioners of indigenous African religions negotiate coexistence in Kenya's coastal region. The book conceptualizes religious diversity as a dynamic field shaped by multiple partly intersecting and partly conflicting models of interaction. These include the political secularism promoted by the Kenyan state and civil society organizations focused on interfaith harmony, forms of competition between religious groups, and pluralistic practices in which individuals draw on multiple traditions to meet spiritual needs.
Through a close examination of civil society initiatives funded by Western donors to foster peacebuilding and to counter violent extremism, the book investigates how these models for coexistence are negotiated and contested and how they intersect with historical and contemporary patterns. It demonstrates that modes of religious coexistence in coastal Kenya have been shaped by colonial and postcolonial governance, transregional connections, and interactions between Christians, Muslims, and Traditionalists across time.
As one of the few monographs on political secularism in an African context, Regulating Religious Coexistence makes a significant contribution to scholarship on religious diversity and coexistence. It situates Christianity, Islam, and indigenous African traditions within a single conceptual framework, broadening earlier studies that mostly treated them in isolation. This book is essential reading for scholars of religion, anthropology, African studies, and political theory, offering fresh insights into the complex realities of religious diversity in Africa and beyond.
Through a close examination of civil society initiatives funded by Western donors to foster peacebuilding and to counter violent extremism, the book investigates how these models for coexistence are negotiated and contested and how they intersect with historical and contemporary patterns. It demonstrates that modes of religious coexistence in coastal Kenya have been shaped by colonial and postcolonial governance, transregional connections, and interactions between Christians, Muslims, and Traditionalists across time.
As one of the few monographs on political secularism in an African context, Regulating Religious Coexistence makes a significant contribution to scholarship on religious diversity and coexistence. It situates Christianity, Islam, and indigenous African traditions within a single conceptual framework, broadening earlier studies that mostly treated them in isolation. This book is essential reading for scholars of religion, anthropology, African studies, and political theory, offering fresh insights into the complex realities of religious diversity in Africa and beyond.
Reviews / Votes
"A nuanced and compelling exploration of how diverse religious communities navigate shared social, political, and cultural spaces. Drawing on rich fieldwork and grounded analysis, the book uncovers the subtle mechanisms through which Muslims, Christians, and other faith groups in coastal Kenya negotiate coexistence-sometimes in harmony, sometimes amid tension. . . . moving beyond simplistic narratives of conflict or tolerance, revealing instead a dynamic landscape shaped by local histories, state regulation, and grassroots initiatives. Insightful, essential reading for scholars of religion, politics, policymakers and practitioners interested in peacebuilding and pluralism." - Hassan Mwakimako, Pwani University"Drawing on deep regional knowledge, Erik Meinema examines religious diversity in coastal Kenya, where coexistence unfolds amid stigma, moral critique, and political imbalance. This lucid, richly historicized account sheds new light on interfaith initiatives, the strategic negotiations of religious actors, and the fragile work of living with difference." - Janet McIntosh, Brandeis University
"We need a more sophisticated analysis of interreligious encounters in Africa that moves beyond the conventional conflict-cooperation model. Erik Meinema's book provides this. Grounded in rich ethnographic research and situated in Kenya's multifaith setting of Malindi, this important book sheds a fresh light on how multiple stakeholders, including civil society organizations, international donors, elders, youth, religious leaders, politicians, and the secular state, understand, experience, and organize religious diversity." - Marloes Janson, SOAS University of London
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Athens
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
4 figures
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-8214-2707-1 (9780821427071)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Erik Meinema is an assistant professor in religious studies at Utrecht University. His work focuses on religious diversity, youth culture, and political secularism in East Africa on which he has (co-)published several peer-reviewed articles. He also published an edited volume on materiality, religion, and conflict with Lucien van Liere.