April 17, 2010 at 9:00 PM EDT
411 Willard Straight Hall
Graduate Christian Fellowship Roundtable
We will examine whether there are places in the university where science and religion might fruitfully connect and models scientists with faith have for participating in religious communities.
Elaine Howard Ecklund is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Rice University, where she also serves as a Rice Scholar of the James Baker III Institute for Public Policy, and Director of the Program on Religion and Public Life at the Institute for Urban Research.
Ecklund received her BS, MA and PhD from Cornell University. Her work has appeared in numerous scholarly outlets including the Annual Review of Sociology, Social Forces, andAmerican Behavioral Scientist. Her first book, Korean American Evangelicals: New Models for Civic Life was published by Oxford University Press.
Ecklund is currently directing three national research projects, including Religion Immigration Civic Engagement (R.I.C.E.), Influences on Science Careers, and Religion among Academic Scientists. The latter is a study on religion and spirituality among scientists at elite research universities, which already has generated widespread coverage in both popular and academic periodicals. See, for example:
Ecklund’s forthcoming book, which is the first work to scientifically examine the religious beliefs of the top research scientists in the United States, is entitled Science Vs. Religion: What Scientists Really Think (Oxford Press). The book will be released on April 7, 2010, just one week before her visit to Cornell.
Please join us to hear about this important new research from one of America’s finest young sociologists of religion.