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Abstract

The distressing state of global democracy and religious liberty provides scholars and foreign policy practitioners an opportunity to rethink national security analysis by considering religious freedom as a national security lens. This article reprises the primary author’s framework, published ten years ago in The Review of Faith & International Affairs, assessing “what they say and do” on religious freedom as a means to understand threats and challenges to global peace and U.S. national security. This article analyzes a specific case—how China treats religion at home, among its neighbors, on the international stage, and in its political ideology.

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Notes on contributors

Eric Patterson

Eric Patterson serves as President of the Religious Freedom Institute in Washington, DC, and is a Scholar-at-Large at Regent University (USA).

Piper Smith

Piper Smith served as an intern at the Religious Freedom Institute and is a student at George Washington University.

Linda Kamau

Linda Kamau earned graduate degrees in Government, Law, and Public Administration from Regent University and serves as a research assistant with Religious Freedom Institute.

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