CFP: Revisiting and Reimaging the Relationships between Science and Religion (SRF 50th Anniversary)

Submission deadline: January 31, 2026

Conference date(s):
May 28, 2025 - May 31, 2025

Go to the conference's page

This event is available both online and in-person

Conference Venue:

Science and Religion Forum
Sheffield, United Kingdom

Topic areas

Details

28th May evening: Public Gowland Lecture

29th May - 31st May: Main Conference

30th May: Formal Conference

Further details and Booking to be announced nearer the event. CfP is OPEN

"Revisiting and Reimaging the Relationships between Science and Religion"

Submissions are invited for traditional papers, round table discussions, or interactive workshops related to the conference theme. Works-in-Progress may be submitted for paper and round table sessions. Paper sessions are 30mins, round tables & workshops are 45mins. Timings include any Q&A [please note final timings many be adjusted slightly to ensure a good flow to the conference - speakers will be notified in good time if this occurs]. 

Students and ECRs may also apply for/be invited to present a "new voices" paper. These are lightning 10minute presentations  + 10mins Q&A designed to share an aspect of research, or prompt a discussion. It is expected that "new voices" papers will be works-in-progress. 

All Submissions MUST engage with the intersection of science and religion. This engagement may include natural or social sciences. Ethnographic/sociological studies that address scientists' engagement with faith or how people of faith engage with science also fall within the remit of this call.

We invite submissions which engage with any issue at the intersection of science and (any) religion. Whilst continuing to value the Christian origins of the Forum, we particularly welcome papers that engage with science and religion from Eastern Orthodox, and non-Christian perspectives which are historically under-represented at our conferences. We encourage speakers to engage directly with the theme "revisiting and reimaging" the relationship. This may include approaches that engage critically with the (continued?) relevance of established/historic positions; addressing underrepresented voices in the sector (including issues related to colonisation, gender, and/or indigenous religions/science); questions of inter/multi disciplinary research, science-and-religion education, and those that look forward to the upcoming opportunities and challenges science-and-religion.

This will be a hybrid conference and we welcome submissions for online delivery to support accessibility of the conference. We will aim to balance online and on site presentations to ensure a mix across the full conference.

Supporting material

Add supporting material (slides, programs, etc.)