Articles | Volume 72, issue 3
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-72-361-2017
https://doi.org/10.5194/gh-72-361-2017
Standard article
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10 Aug 2017
Standard article |  | 10 Aug 2017

Post-secular rapprochement in peripheralized regions – politics of withdrawal and parish community responses

Frank Meyer and Judith Miggelbrink

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Cited articles

Bartolini, N., Chris, R., MacKian, S., and Pile, S.: The place of spirit: Modernity and the geographies of spirituality, Prog. Hum. Geog., 41, 338–354, 2017.
Beaumont, J.: Faith action on urban social issues, Urban Studies, 45, 2019–2034, 2008.
Beaumont, J. and Baker, C. (Eds.): Postsecular Cities: Space, Theory and Practice. Continuum, London, 2011.
Beaumont, J. and Dias, C.: Faith-based organizations and urban social justice in The Netherlands, Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, 99, 382–392, 2008.
Beckford, J. A.: SSSR Presidential Address Public Religions and the Postsecular: Critical Reflections, J. Sci. Stud. Relig., 51, 1–19, 2012.
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Short summary
In many rural parts of Germany, secularization overlaps with outmigration and population decline. As a result, Christian churches face significant financial pressure in the rural areas near big cities due to plummeting numbers of parish members. Using a case study in the Evangelical Church in Central Germany, we argue that cooperation between different groups of belief helps local communities mitigating worsening socioeconomic circumstances and the withdrawal of finances and church staff.