Minority Religions and Religious Tolerance: The Jehovahs Witness Test
By (Author) Zoe Knox
Edited by Emily B. Baran
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
2nd October 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book argues that the treatment of Jehovahs Witnesses is a critical gauge for measuring the level of religious toleration and freedom in any given society. Witnesses beliefs and practices exist at the margins of what most modern states and societies deem acceptable. Thus, the Jehovahs Witness test reveals much about the conditions for minority religions in any given state.
The chapters focus on a range of geographic locations, including South America, Rwanda, and South Korea, across the 20th and 21st centuries. Each one highlights what Witnesses tell us about the state of tolerance in that context, focusing on salient issues such as taxation regimes, religious legislation, ethics and law, human rights, medical treatment and gender. The central objective is twofold: to see what insights the analysis of Witnesses offers to our broader understanding of religious tolerance and to determine how Witnesses have shaped the way we regard basic religious freedoms.
The book is a multidisciplinary call for scholars to recognize the Jehovahs Witnesses as a crucial litmus test for tolerance. Taken together, the contributions demonstrate that the treatment of Jehovahs Witnesses reveal the extent to which modern societies and governments uphold and respect basic civil liberties.
Zoe Knox is Associate Professor of Modern Russian History at the University of Leicester, UK.
Emily B. Baran is Associate Professor of History at Middle Tennessee State University, USA.