International Cultic Studies Association Explained

International Cultic Studies Association
Size:210px
Formation:1979, as American Family Foundation (AFF), renamed in 2004
Founder:Kay Barney
Leader Title:Executive Director
Leader Name:Jacqueline Johnson, DSW
Leader Title2:President
Leader Name2:Debby Schriver
Location:Savannah, Georgia, United States
Area Served:Global

The International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA) is a non-profit educational and anti-cult organization. It publishes the International Journal of Coercion, Abuse, and Manipulation, "ICSA Today", and other materials.

History

ICSA was founded in 1979 in Massachusetts as the American Family Foundation (AFF) – one of several dozen disparate parents' groups founded in the late 1970s by concerned parents.[1] [2] For a time it was affiliated with the Citizens’ Freedom Foundation (CFF) which later became the Cult Awareness Network (CAN).[3] It also developed links with Christian counter-cult movements such as the Christian Research Institute.[3] In December 2004, it changed its named from American Family Foundation to International Cultic Studies Association.[4]

Publications

Print magazines

In 1984, the American Family Foundation's early print magazine, The Advisor, was replaced by the Cult Observer and the Cultic Studies Journal.[5]

Cultic Studies Review

In 2001, publication of the Cultic Studies Journal ceased, and the AFF began publishing the Cultic Studies Review as an online journal with triennial print editions.[6] In 2005, the final AFF published edition of Cultic Studies Review was released. Subsequent editions were published by the International Cultic Studies Association until 2010.[7]

International Journal of Cultic Studies

International Journal of Cultic Studies
Abbreviation:Int. J. Cultic Stud.
Lccn:2010204406
Issn:2154-7270
Eissn:2154-7289
Oclc:608305709

In 2010, the first print and online editions of the International Journal of Cultic Studies were published online, as a self-described "refereed annual journal that publishes scholarly research on cultic phenomena across a range of disciplines and professions".[8] [9] [10]

Reception

Connections with post-communist governments

Bryan Edelman and James T. Richardson state that China has borrowed heavily from Western anti-cult movements, such as ICSA, to bolster their view of non-mainstream religious groups, and so the support campaigns of oppression against them.[11] In a previous article Richardson and Marat S. Shterin said that Western anti-cult organizations, including the CSA, had been a source of anti-cult material in Russia.[12]

Criticism

In their book Cults and New Religions: A Brief History, sociologists Douglas E. Cowan and David G. Bromley describe the ICSA as a "secular anticult" organization. They claim that the ICSA provides no indication of how many of its cult characteristics are necessary for a group to be considered "cultic," and that the checklist creators do not adequately define how much of certain practices or behaviors would constitute "excessive," nor do they provide evidence that any of the practices listed are innately harmful. Cowan and Bromley also allege that the ICSA’s list is so broad that even mainstream religious movements such as Buddhism, Evangelical Protestantism, Hinduism, and the Roman Catholic Church could fall within the criteria.[13]

Notes and References

  1. Book: George D. Chryssides . A Reader in New Religious Movements: Readings in the Study of New Religious Movements . Margaret Wilkins . 2006 . Continuum International Publishing Group . 978-0-8264-6168-1 . 360 . 12 December 2012.
  2. Web site: Langone. Michael. History of American Family Foundation. 10 January 2015.
  3. Book: Peter Clarke. Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements. 2004. Routledge. 978-1-134-49970-0.
  4. Web site: Cult Info Since 1979 – Name Change 2004 . 2022-08-01 . www.icsahome.com . en-US.
  5. Langone. Michael. To the reader. Cultic Studies Journal. May 1984. 1. 1. 3.
  6. Langone. Michael. Introduction to Inaugural Issue. Cultic Studies Review. 2002. 1. 1. 5.
  7. Wehle . Dana . Madsen . Libbe . Cultic Studies Review . 2010 . 9 . 1.
  8. Carmen Almendros. Dianne Casoni. Rod Dubrow-Marshall. About the International Journal of Cultic Studies. International Journal of Cultic Studies. 2010. 1. 1.
  9. Web site: International Journal of Cultic Studies - International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA) . Icsahome.com . 2015-01-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140305090725/http://www.icsahome.com/elibrary/ijcs . 2014-03-05 . dead .
  10. Dole . A. A. . Book review . 10.1007/BF00987757 . Journal of Religion & Health . 28 . 3 . 245–246 . 1989 . 40318380 .
  11. Imposed limitations on freedom of religion in China and the margin of appreciation doctrine: a legal analysis of the crackdown on the Falun Gong and other "evil cults". Bryan. Edelman. James T.. Richardson. Journal of Church and State. 47. 2. 2005. 243. 10.1093/jcs/47.2.243.
  12. Richardson . James T. . Shterin . Marat S. . 2000 . Effects of the Western anti-cult movement on development of laws concerning religion in post-Communist Russia . Journal of Church and State . 42 . 2 . 247 . 10.1093/jcs/42.2.247 .
  13. Cowan, Douglas E. and Bromley, David G. Cults and New Religions: A Brief History. Blackwell Publishing. 2009. pp. 4, 219–222.