“…4 Then President to disregard aid recipients' historically and culturally situated understandings-resulting in the reinforcement of top-down, ethnocentric formulations and problematic distinctions between over-determined imaginations of the spheres of 'religion' and 'development'. 5 ethnographies of FBOs, on the other hand, often question the cross-cultural validity of such a sharp distinction between religion and development and reveal the contingent character of this constructed dichotomy as grounded in specific histories of Western modernity (e.g., Benthall and Bellion-Jourdan, 2009;Bolotta, 2017;Bornstein, 2005;Fauzia, 2013;Feener, 2013;Feener and Keping, forthcoming;Fountain et al, 2015;Mostowlansky, 2017;Scheer et al, 2018). 6 Such studies have examined how the religioussecular divide gets divergently signified and contested at global, national and local levels by a range of different actors, such as international and private donors, policymakers, political authorities, NGO workers, religious specialists and aid recipients.…”