Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Religion/Women in Religion series

In addition to writing, creating, and improving biographies about Women in Religion on Wikipedia, one of the goals of WikiProject Women in Religion is to increase content about them in the general scholarship. Our strategy is to provide secondary sources for Wikipedia editors and contributors to use to increase the content about women in religion on Wikipedia. To that end, we have participated in the publication of, as of the summer of 2023, three volumes of monographs, published by Atla Open Press and the Parliament of the World's Religions.

If you would like to participate in this endeavor, please choose a subject in the lists below and when you are completed working on her Wikipedia bio, please place your username in the "Main WP editor" cell. Please use the monograph as one of your sources.

The WikiProject is conducting an experiment on the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the creation of Wikipedia biographies, using the biographies in the volumes as "subjects" in the study. For more information, contact User:Clifford Anderson.

Volume 1: Claiming Notability

 * Claiming Notability for Women Activists in Religion (2020)
 * Edited by Colleen D. Hartung (User:Dzingle1), Wikiproject Women in Religion's co-founder, by Atla Open Press.
 * Consists of ten biographies of women underrepresented in Wikipedia and in academic literature.

Volume 2: Challenging Bias
Volume 2 in the Women in Religion series, also edited by Colleen D. Hartung, was published by Atla Open Press in 2021 and was entitled Challenging Bias against Women Academics in Religion It focuses on female academics (teachers, professors, theologians, and scholars).

Volume 3: Women Advancing Knowledge Equity: The Parliament of the World's Religions
Volume 3 in the Women in Religion series, Women Advancing Knowledge Equity: The Parliament of the World's Religions, also edited by Colleen D. Hartung, was published in December 2023 by the Parliament of the World's Religions. The volume focuses on women important in the history of the Parliament.

This volume is dedicated to Mary (Polly) Hamlen, a founding member of the Women in Religion Wikipedia Project. Polly’s extraordinary contributions as an editor on Wikipedia, as an author of secondary sources about under-covered women in religion, and as patient mentor, have made a significant, global impact on the problem of gender bias on Wikipedia and beyond. We are grateful.