Freeing God's Children: The Unlikely Alliance for Global
Human Rights. By Allen D. Hertzke. Boulder, CO: Rowman &
Littlefield, 2004. 440p. $27.95.
Contemporary international relations scholarship has generally
disregarded the role of religion in global politics. The two dominant IR
paradigms—neorealism and neoliberalism—tend to neglect
religion altogether, assuming that religious beliefs and institutions are
an impediment to world order. To a significant degree, the skepticism
about religion is rooted in the prevailing Western assumption that science
and reason will make religion unnecessary in modern life. However,
contrary to the prevailing wisdom, the world has not become more secular.
Rather, religion has become more prominent in society, especially in Asia,
Africa, and Latin America. As a result, the leading secular IR paradigms
have failed to take into account the religious dimension in international
affairs.