Non-Formal Faith Education, the Public School, and Religious Minorities in Norway (FAITHED)

Non-Formal Faith Education, the Public School, and Religious Minorities in Norway (FAITHED)
Photo: NTB/Scanpix - CC
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Oct 2021 - Sep 2025

The FAITHED project studies children and youth with a religious minority background in Norway and their relationship to non-formal and formal religious education, i.e. faith education within their own religious communities and the inclusive and non-confessional religious education of the public school.


  • ​What are the characteristics of faith education within these religious communities? 
  • How do the children and youth themselves relate to and negotiate the relationship between this education and the subject KRLE (Christianity, Religion, Philosophies of Life and Ethics) of the public school? 
  • How does the public school meet students from religious minorities? 
  • And how do students in public schools consider religious and life-stance plurality?
These are the main questions to which the FAITHED project will start searching for answers. The field is complex and little researched. 

The project concentrates on the two most numerous religious minorities in Norway, Muslim communities and the Roman Catholic Church. Both have a large proportion of members with immigrant background. An important aspect of the study concerns geographical differences. Much research on minorities in Norway has had an urban focus. Being Catholic or Muslim in a rural area may be a rather different experience. 

The project will collect data from both Eastern and Western Norway, and from urban as well as rural areas.

The project period spans four years, 2021–2025, and is funded by the Research Council of Norway.

Project organization and partners


Four institutions are partners in the FAITHED project: 
  • Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences (INN), 
  • Volda University College, 
  • the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)
  • KIFO Institute for Church, Religion, and Worldview Research. 

The interdisciplinary research team includes twelve religious studies, education studies and social studies scholars, among them two PhD candidates. 

The project leader Anders Aschim is a professor of religious education at INN. 

An international Advisory board consisting of leading scholars from Sweden, Denmark, Germany and the United Kingdom is also attached to the project.



Research Groups

Publications

Book Chapter

Kleive, Hildegunn Valen; Anders Aschim; Marta Bivand Erdal & Marte Fanneløb Giskeødegård (2020) Når Jesus tar til gatene: Katolske Corpus Christi-prosesjoner i norske byrom [Jesus Takes to the Streets: Catholic Corpus Chrsiti Processions in Norwegian Urban Spaces], in Sæther, Knut-Willy; & Anders Aschim, eds, Rom og sted: Religionsfaglige og interdisiplinære bidrag. Oslo: Cappelen Damm Akademisk (47–65).
Erdal, Marta Bivand (2016) Innenfra, utenfra og tredjeposisjoner? Refleksiv posisjonalitet i forskning blant katolikker i Norge [Insider, outsider or third positions? Reflexive positionality in research among Catholics in Norway], in Aschim, Anders; Olav Hovdelien; & Helje Kringlebotn Sødal, eds, Kristne migranter i Norden [Christian migrants in the Nordic countries]. Kristiansand: Portal.
Erdal, Marta Bivand (2016) When Poland became the main country of birth among Catholics in Norway’: Exploring the interface of Polish migrants’ everyday narratives and Church responses to a rapid demographic re-constitution, in Pasura, Dominic; & Marta Bivand Erdal, eds, Migration, Transnationalism and Catholicism: Global Perspectives. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Pasura, Dominic & Marta Bivand Erdal (2016) Introduction: Migration, Transnationalism and Catholicism, in Pasura, Dominic; & Marta Bivand Erdal, eds, Migration, Transnationalism and Catholicism: Global Perspectives. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.