"Provides an in-depth, empirical and critical study of a local interfaith organization which is still lacking in the field of Religious Studies which is then used to reflect on the global (and 'glocalised') interfaith movement. The book examines how forms of religious pluralism have been related to nationalism, and the Scottish data is put into dialogue with global studies of the interfaith movement and studies of other 'national' contexts such as the wider UK, the US and India"--