Today, disputes over rights are centrally influenced by religiosity. Thus, understanding the relationships between religiosity and the public sphere is crucial for thinking about current and future configurations of society. For this reason, this line of research focuses on two main issues at the national level: understanding how the public sphere contributes to the construction of a common understanding of religion, taking into account social markers of difference such as ethnicity, race, gender, sexuality, and class; and understanding how religiosity contributes to the production of a common understanding of rights and citizenship. The research related to the first issue will involve a historical analysis of news reports and opinion articles in newspapers. The second research issue will be addressed through three ethnographic approaches: agro-Christianity; religious education in public schools; and how Christian, secular, and Muslim organizations engage with and support non-Christian and non-Western migrant and refugee populations.