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Proactive Tolerance / Tolerance for Ukraine: Interreligious Insights
Proactive Tolerance / Tolerance for Ukraine: Interreligious Insights
Contents
Chapter
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Authors
Page
1–8
Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
1–8
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9–16
Introduction
9–16
9–9
Further development of the concept of tolerance
9–9
Details
10–10
Ukraine as a Test Laboratory for the Challenges of Proactive Tolerance
10–10
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11–11
The threat to freedom
11–11
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12–12
Religious conflicts as a focal point of (in)tolerance
12–12
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13–13
Fratelli tutti as an encyclical for dialogue and proactive tolerance
13–13
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13–13
Tolerance and truth in the media society
13–13
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14–15
Tolerance needs rules and social places
14–15
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16–16
References
16–16
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17–114
Conceptual Clarification
17–114
17–36
Proactive Tolerance as a Way to Peace
Markus Vogt, Rolf Husmann
Markus Vogt, Rolf Husmann
17–36
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A Christian Social Ethical Definition of Tolerance as a conceptual basis for the project “Tolerance at the Borders of Europe – the Ukrainian Dimension”
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A. Aim of the text
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B. Systematic Development of the term
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B.1 Differentiations concerning the term “tolerance”
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B.2 Ethical assumptions and rules of the concept of tolerance
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C. Practical Reasoning
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C.1 Analysis of agents
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C.1.1 Agent state
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C.1.2 Agent citizens
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C.1.3 Agent science
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C.1.4 Agent churches, religious communities and theology
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C.2 Resources and motivation for a tolerant behavior
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D. The tolerance-concept and the situation in Ukraine
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D.1 See & evaluate
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D.2 Act: Perspectives for implementation of tolerance
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References
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37–62
Tolerance – An Issue of Christian Social Thought
Alois Joh. Buch
Alois Joh. Buch
37–62
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Contexts, approaches, prospects
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I. Contexts: framing the understanding and acceptance of tolerance
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II. Approaches: Christian interpretation and encouragement of tolerance
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III. Prospects: practising tolerance, spurred by virtues
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Conclusion
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References
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Online Sources
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63–74
Proactive Tolerance
Rolf Husmann
Rolf Husmann
63–74
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A Deeper Understanding of Proactivity
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Proactive tolerance as distinct from passive and active tolerance
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Proactive tolerance as exemplified by Gandhi
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Proactive tolerance and response
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The special role of religions in proactive tolerance
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References
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75–114
The Duty of Tolerance as Duty of Public Civility
Daniel Munteanu
Daniel Munteanu
75–114
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Religious and philosophical insights for a culture of convivence and political responsibility
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Introductory remarks on the meaning and understanding of tolerance
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1 Religious tolerance as “business of true religion” according to John Locke
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1.1 Boundaries of ecclesiastical power as logical reasons for a culture of tolerance
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1.2 Civil tolerance as “business of magistrate
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i.e. laws”
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2 Justice as fairness and tolerance. John Rawls’ contribution to a public culture of tolerance
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2.1 The nature of the rational social world
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2.2 Human dignity and the moral powers of rationality
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2.3 Tolerance as “duty of civility” and public reason
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2.4 Tolerance as public reason and public use of rationality
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3 Religious resources for a culture of tolerance
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3.1 Tolerance as an emergence process
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3.2 Tolerance as an intersubjective attitude
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3.3 The ability of people to relate and their obligation to relate
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3.4 The human being as cultural creation and creator of culture
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3.5 Ecumenical culture of proactive tolerance
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3.6 Social and self-conditioning for tolerance
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3.7 Tolerance for understanding – tolerance as creative power for responsible shaping of the society’s social structure
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3.8 Tolerance as ethical disposition to structure intersubjective relations
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References
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115–194
Tolerance, Peace and Democracy
115–194
115–138
Christian Peace Ethics and Its Relevance for Tolerance and Reconciliation in Ukraine
Markus Vogt
Markus Vogt
115–138
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1. The difference between ideal and reality
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2. For an enlightened religion
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3. Won wars do not mean that the peace has been won
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4. Biblical Perspectives
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5. On the history of the Christian ethics of peace in the papal magisterium
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6. Christian commitment to peace in practice
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7. Humanitarian intervention and “Responsibility to protect”
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8. Paths and priorities of peacekeeping in relation to Ukraine
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References
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139–154
Tolerance, Political Liberty and Democracy: Social Recognition and Belonging
Arnd Küppers
Arnd Küppers
139–154
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1. Four concepts of tolerance in relation to democracy
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2. The classical-liberal understanding of democracy and the limits of public tolerance
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2.1 The right to be intolerant
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2.2 Power must be limited – also democratic power
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2.3 Negative freedom and the egalitarian temptation
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3. Positive freedom, social recognition and democracy
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3.1 Positive freedom as a precondition of living democracy
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3.2 Esteem, social recognition and belonging
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3.2.1 Spheres of recognition and tolerance
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3.2.2 Politics of recognition and esteem-tolerance for democratic togetherness
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Conclusion
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References
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155–168
Proactive Tolerance as a Social Resilience Factor in the Context of an Anti-Identitarian Social Ethics
Lars Schäfers
Lars Schäfers
155–168
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An Exploration on the Basis of a Social Psychological Understanding of Identity
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Social-psychologically determined personal identity
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Resilience according to Clemens Sedmak: An identity-practical and individual-ethical grounded...
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...and social-ethically advanced concept of resilience.
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Right-Wing Identity Politics as a Challenge to Social Resilience
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Excursus: Brague's narrative identity of Europe as a counter-draft to the right-wing populist concept of the Occident
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Conclusion: Proactive tolerance as a social resilience factor
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References
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169–176
Tolerance as a Question of Public Goods and Social Places
Sarah Herbst, Berthold Vogel
Sarah Herbst, Berthold Vogel
169–176
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Tolerance as a relational skill
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The value of public goods
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Perspectives on public goods
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The Concept of Social Places: New Infrastructures for Social Cohesion
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References
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177–194
Tolerance and (Social) Market Economy
Arnd Küppers
Arnd Küppers
177–194
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1. Discrimination and exclusion in the market
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2. Economic liberalisation as liberation and anti-discrimination program
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3. Discriminating mechanisms and effects in free market economies
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a) Rawls and the injustice of the liberal meritocracy
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b) Piketty and the problem of growing inequality
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4. The concept of Social Market Economy
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a) Ordoliberalism: fair competition and the limitation of economic power.
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b) Welfare policy and social irenics
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5. Conclusions
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References
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195–266
Religious Tolerance in Eastern Europe
195–266
195–214
Religious Plurality as a Socio-Political Factor in the Ukraine
Katrin Boeckh
Katrin Boeckh
195–214
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Introduction
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1. No Religious Tolerance in the Soviet Union and the Soviet Ukraine
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2. The institutionalization of post-Soviet religious tolerance in the Ukraine
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References
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215–226
The Concept of Tolerance and its Relevance in Ukraine
Ihor Vehesh
Ihor Vehesh
215–226
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References
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227–248
Interreligious Dialogue as a Power of Ukrainian Civil Society
Michael Fetko
Michael Fetko
227–248
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1. Religions in Public Discourse
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2. Religious Affiliations in Ukraine
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3. Interreligious Dialogue as a Power of Ukranian Civil Society
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References
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249–266
Tolerance for Ukraine: Interreligious Insights
Pavlo Smytsnyuk
Pavlo Smytsnyuk
249–266
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Age of Confusion
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Can tolerance be grounded theologically?
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References
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267–319
Tolerance, Law, Media and Education
267–319
267–288
Tolerance – From a Canon Law Perspective
Helmuth Pree
Helmuth Pree
267–288
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1. Introductory Remarks
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2. Tolerance – its basic elements from a juridical point of view
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3. The roots of the idea of tolerance
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a) In the history of Canon Law
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aa) Catholic tradition
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bb) Orthodox tradition
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b) Biblical and other theological roots
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c) Human dignity as the basis of tolerance
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4. Tolerance in present Canon Law
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5. Resume and Prospect
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a) Tolerance in present Canon Law
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b) What tolerance in Canon Law stands for – Consequences
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(1) Tolerance as a moral attitude
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(2) Tolerance as a moral-juridical principle
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aa) Ad intra
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bb) Ad extra
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References
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289–304
Constructive (Peace) Journalism as a Mediator of Proactive Tolerance – a Media-ethical Perspective
Lars Schäfers
Lars Schäfers
289–304
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Introduction: The societal functions of journalism
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The big brother: Constructive journalism as a reporting pattern
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The older sister: the peace journalistic idea as a constructive reporting pattern
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Responsible Peace Journalism – explication of the ethical perspective
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Constructive (Peace) Journalism and Proactive Tolerance in the Context of the Ukrainian Conflict – Attempt at a Synthesis
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References
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305–316
Dialogue and Perspective
Lisa-Marie Mansfeld, Andreas Schoch
Lisa-Marie Mansfeld, Andreas Schoch
305–316
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Thoughts on Interaction between Interreligious Learning and Proactive Tolerance
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1. Introduction
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2. Context of interreligious learning
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3. Developments in religious education – From the difference to the common
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4. Interreligious learning as a contribution to proactive tolerance
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4.1 Of encounters and testimonies
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4.2 Tolerance as a condition and goal
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4.3 A Change of perspective as the goal of the learning process
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5. Limits of the concepts
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5.1 Excessive expectations: Interreligious learning as the sole savior
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5.2 The question of identity: interreligious learning and the concept of home
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5.3 Actual results? The problem of the measurability of attitudes and values
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6. Summary
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References
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317–318
Index of Contributors
317–318
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319–319
Abbreviations
319–319
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Proactive Tolerance , page 249 - 266
Tolerance for Ukraine: Interreligious Insights
Autoren
Pavlo Smytsnyuk
DOI
doi.org/10.5771/9783748905431-249
ISBN print: 978-3-8487-6497-6
ISBN online: 978-3-7489-0543-1
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