This book addresses the challenges of living together after empire in many post-colonial
cities. It is organized in two sections. The first section focuses on efforts by people of
multiple faiths to live together within their contexts including such efforts within a
neighborhood in urban Manchester the array of attempts at creating multi-faith spaces for
worship across the globe and initiatives to commemorate divisive conflict together in Northern
Ireland. The second section utilizes particular postcolonial methods to illuminate pressing
issues within specific contexts-including women's leadership in an indigenous denomination in
the variegated African landscape and baptism and discipleship among Dalit communities in
India. In the context of growing multiculturalism in the West this volume offers a
postcolonial theological resource challenging the epistemologies in the Western academy.