Webinar: Ideas, Religion, and Social Change: Insights from the Bahá’í Community’s 75-year engagement with the United Nations
Posted in: Religion
This talk is based on Dr. Berger’s publication: Rethinking Politics and Religion in a Plural World: The Baha’i International Community and the United Nations (Bloomsbury, 2021). In this webinar, Dr. Berger traces the experience of a community whose ideas about social order and the mechanisms of social change are refashioning familiar notions of politics as well as religion. Focusing on the Bahá’í International Community (BIC), an international non-governmental organization (NGO) which represents the worldwide Bahá’í community in global fora—most notably, at the United Nations.
Dr. Berger explores a distinctive example of an approach to social change that goes beyond the divisive, antagonistic modes that tend to characterize political processes–one that lays the foundations for new patterns of relationships among individuals, communities, and governing institutions—patterns attuned to the needs of an evolving, interdependent global community. The lecture focuses on several elements of a framework that shapes the Bahá’í approach to politics, including a developmental view of history, and the principle of the oneness of humanity, and further, examines the role of the Baha’i system of governance in shaping the BIC’s engagement with the international community.