RT Article T1 Negotiating Spirituality in Sustainable Collectives: A Case-Study of Two Multi-Spiritual European Ecovillages JF Journal for the study of religion, nature and culture VO 19 IS 4 SP 470 OP 494 A1 Bruehwiler, Nadine ca. 20./21. Jh. LA English YR 2025 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1948410052 AB Spirituality is increasingly seen as bearing potential to support transitions toward more sustainable behavior. However, knowledge about how sustainable collectives including members who identify as spiritual and nonspiritual negotiate this diversity to ensure their sustainability goals is limited. Applying a lived religion approach, this article addresses this gap based on an instrumental qualitative case study of two European ecovillages which include members holding diverse spiritualities and members who do not identify as spiritual. The analysis of fieldwork data regarding how spirituality becomes manifest in community narratives, rituals, pro-environmental behaviors, and materiality shows that spirituality is not important for the ecovillages as collective actors for sustainability - but spirituality matters to be a sustainable collective. Core to negotiating diversity related to spirituality are inclusively designed shared practices that rely on the communities' narratives and foci. Based on these findings, this study argues for a more fine-grained analysis of the role of spirituality for collective action for sustainability in contexts of deep diversity related to spirituality. K1 Diversity K1 ecovillages K1 grassroots activism K1 grassroots innovations K1 Lived Religion K1 religion and ecology K1 Spirituality K1 Sustainability DO 10.1558/jsrnc.33042