Linda Woodhead


Linda Jane Pauline Woodhead is a British academic specialising in the religious studies and sociology of religion. She is best known for her work on religious change since the 1980s, and for initiating public debates about faith. She has been described by Matthew Taylor, head of the Royal Society of Arts, as "one of the world's leading experts on religion". Since 2006, she has been Professor of Sociology of Religion in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion at Lancaster University. From 2007 to 2012, she was director of the AHRC/ESRC Religion and Society Programme.

Life and career

Woodhead was born in Taunton and grew up in rural Somerset. She attended Bishop Fox's comprehensive school and Richard Huish Sixth Form College in Taunton. She studied Theology and Religious Studies at Emmanuel College, Cambridge and was awarded Double First Class Honours
in 1985, receiving the MA by conversion in 1989. Woodhead undertook her first post as Tutor in Doctrine and Ethics at Ripon College Cuddesdon Oxford. In 1992, she moved to Lancaster University.
She was awarded an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree by Uppsala University in 2009 and also a Doctor of Letters. She was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire in the 2013 New Year Honours for services to higher education.
Wood has been married to Alexander Mercer since 2007 and lives between Glasgow and Lancaster. She was previously married to Alan Billings, the current South Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner.

Religion and society research programme

In 2007 Woodhead was appointed Director of the £12m Religion and Society research programme, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the Economic and Social Research Council. This initiative funded 265 academics and researchers from 29 different disciplines working on 75 separate research projects and other initiatives including British Religion in Numbers and RadicalisationResearch.org.

Westminster faith debates

Woodhead co-founded the Westminster Faith Debates with former Home Secretary Charles Clarke in 2011. The debates were originally created to publicise findings from the Religion and Society programme, but have since become an annual series. They bring researchers into conversation with prominent figures in public life and have included former Prime Minister Tony Blair, ethnologist and atheist author Richard Dawkins, and the Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams. The debates have been covered by BBC Radio, LBC, The Guardian, The Independent, The Times, the Evening Standard and other UK and international media.

Research and writing

Woodhead has carried out empirical research around the world. She has studied neo-Hinduism, Christianity, spirituality, and Islam in Europe. Her work examines the relationship between religions and social change, especially in modern times.
An Introduction to Christianity, Christianity: a very short introduction , and Religions in the Modern World consider the development of religions over time by examining how they confirm or challenge power relations in wider society. Using this approach Woodhead explains why churches have declined in modern Europe but not elsewhere.
The Spiritual Revolution is based on the 'Kendal Project' and documented the growth of alternative spirituality and the relative decline of churches and chapels. In Religion and Change in Modern Britain and Everyday Lived Islam in Europe Woodhead expanded this approach by showing how new 'post-confessional' ways of being religious have eclipsed a traditional 'Reformation style' of religion in Britain and more widely since the late 1980s.
Woodhead's work on religion, identity, and power is developed in articles on religion and gender, Muslim veiling controversies, governance of religious diversity, religion and politics, religion and law. Her conceptual approach to religion is systematised in A Sociology of Religious Emotion in a schema which integrates religion's bodily, ritual, emotional and cognitive dimensions.

Policy and media

Woodhead is a regular feature and comment writer on religion for The Tablet magazine and The Guardian and The Observer newspapers. She has appeared on BBC One's The Big Questions and BBC Radio 4 programmes including PM, Thought for the Day, Analysis and Thinking Allowed. She has written a major report for the Equality and Human Rights Commission. She was invited to the World Economic Forum summit in Davos in 2013.

Published works

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