Positioning Missionaries in Development Studies, Policy, and Practice

•Diagnoses causes of the difficult relationship between missionaries and development.•Reviews 48 sources proposing and critiquing typologies of faith-based organizations (FBOs).•Finds that FBO typologies are based on outdated assumptions separating religious and secular actors.•Proposes a framework...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inWorld development Vol. 90; pp. 63 - 76
Main Author Smith, Jonathan D.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Elsevier Ltd 01.02.2017
Pergamon Press Inc
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Summary:•Diagnoses causes of the difficult relationship between missionaries and development.•Reviews 48 sources proposing and critiquing typologies of faith-based organizations (FBOs).•Finds that FBO typologies are based on outdated assumptions separating religious and secular actors.•Proposes a framework to analyze links between beliefs and practices of development for all religious and secular actors. This article diagnoses major causes of the uncomfortable relationship between missionaries and development scholars and practitioners, and it proposes new ways to clarify the relationship through shared reflection on sacred influences that shape global development. In the past fifteen years the turn to religion in development studies has altered how development scholars and practitioners perceive religious actors, opening up possibilities for renewed partnership. Yet the turn to religion in development has mostly disregarded missionaries. This oversight is partly due to the complicated historical relationship between Western Christian missionaries and development workers. Although missionaries have long participated in the work of development, present-day missionaries remain associated with coercive proselytization, or they are overlooked in literature on religion and development. In order to understand the challenges of positioning missionaries in development, I review 48 sources which create, apply, or critique typologies of faith-based organizations (FBOs). FBO typologies of the past fifteen years have broken new ground in exploring the links between beliefs and practices of religious actors doing development work. Yet these typologies struggle to position missionaries due to (1) simplistic categorization of FBOs, (2) unhelpful scales of religiosity, and (3) a basis in outdated assumptions of separate spheres of religious and secular actors, and separate worlds of religion and development. Based on shared critiques of FBO typologies, I propose a new framework for positioning missionaries. The framework provides a shared space to explore how all development actors, both religious and secular, are shaped by the interaction between sacred and material influences. The framework offers a way to move beyond circular arguments about comparative advantage of religious or secular approaches toward an appreciation of the complementarity of different approaches to development. The article concludes with a shared critique of missionaries and development workers who impose their beliefs and values on others.
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ISSN:0305-750X
1873-5991
DOI:10.1016/j.worlddev.2016.08.016