World Religions IA Ideas Examiner-ranked topics · 2026
Open the World Religions IA frame →

24 IB World Religions IA ideas that score highly

Experienced IB examiners's pick of World Religions investigative-study topics for 2026 — sorted by area of enquiry, each with the focused question, the likely sources and why it scores. Choose one, then plan it in our examiner-written World Religions investigative-study frame.

What makes a World Religions IA topic score? A strong World Religions IA investigates a focused belief, practice, ritual or contemporary issue within a religion — chosen from a tradition not studied in your course — using balanced primary and secondary sources (scripture, a practitioner, scholarship), analysed and interpreted sensitively rather than merely described. Every idea below is built to be focused, source-rich and interpretable — phrase yours as a "how" or "why" question, and remember critical reflection (Criterion D /10) wins the most marks.

Found a topic you like?

Drop it straight into the free World Religions investigative-study frame. The planning sections — rationale, preliminary research and your plan — are free; unlock the full step-by-step study (findings, critical reflection & evaluation, references) to take it to the top band.

Start this IA in the World Religions frame →

BELIEF & DOCTRINE

Investigations that read a practice or object as a window onto a specific belief make analysis — not description — natural.

1 · How and why do Tibetan Buddhists use prayer flags, and what do they reveal about beliefs in merit and impermanence?

Topic: Tibetan Buddhist prayer flags (lung ta) · Focused question: how/why they are made, hung and renewed and what they enact · Likely sources: printed mantras & hanging instructions (scripture/primary), a practitioner or monastery account, scholarship on Tibetan ritual

A single concrete practice that visibly embodies two doctrines (merit-making, impermanence); insider, scholarly and commercialised modern readings give real balance for the critical reflection.

beliefrituallived religion

2 · How do Quakers understand silent waiting worship, and what does it reveal about their belief in the inner light?

Topic: Quaker (Religious Society of Friends) unprogrammed worship · Focused question: how silence is understood and what it expresses about the inner light · Likely sources: Quaker Faith & Practice (primary), a Friend's account of meeting, scholarship on Quaker spirituality

A focused, source-rich belief that is easy to evidence yet rich to interpret; the contrast between programmed and unprogrammed Friends supplies more than one perspective.

beliefworshipexperience

3 · How is the Bahá'í principle of the unity of religions understood, and how do believers reconcile it with doctrinal difference?

Topic: Bahá'í teaching of progressive revelation · Focused question: how the unity of religions is interpreted and where tensions arise · Likely sources: Bahá'í writings (primary), a community member's perspective, secondary scholarship on Bahá'í theology

A defined doctrine within a tradition rarely taught in class, with a built-in interpretive tension (unity vs. difference) that rewards a measured, balanced conclusion.

beliefdoctrineinterpretation

RITUAL, FESTIVAL & WORSHIP

A named ritual or festival gives you specific evidence to examine and a clear "how and why" to answer.

4 · How is the festival of Sukkot observed, and what does the sukkah reveal about Jewish ideas of dependence on God?

Topic: Jewish festival of Sukkot and the sukkah · Focused question: how the temporary dwelling is built and used and what it signifies · Likely sources: Torah & rabbinic texts on Sukkot (primary), an observant family's account, scholarship on Jewish festival practice

A bounded, concrete festival with a single ritual object to interpret; the gap between scriptural rationale and lived practice gives genuine analysis.

festivalritualsacred text

5 · How and why do pilgrims perform the rites of the Hajj at Mina, and what do they signify about submission?

Topic: the stoning rite (Ramy al-Jamarat) within the Hajj · Focused question: how the rite is performed and why, and what it expresses about submission to God · Likely sources: Qur'an & hadith (primary), a pilgrim's testimony, scholarship on Hajj ritual

Narrowing the whole Hajj to one rite keeps it investigable; the symbolism of submission is interpretable from named primary and secondary sources.

ritualpilgrimagebelief

6 · How does the Sikh practice of langar at the gurdwara express the beliefs in seva and equality?

Topic: the communal kitchen (langar) in Sikhism · Focused question: how langar is run and what it enacts about seva and the rejection of caste · Likely sources: the Guru Granth Sahib & Sikh history (primary), a gurdwara observation or interview, scholarship on Sikh practice

A single, observable practice that directly embodies named beliefs; comparing scriptural ideal with lived diaspora practice gives the critical reflection something to weigh.

worshipethicslived religion

7 · How and why is Dia de los Muertos observed, and what does it reveal about Catholic-Indigenous syncretism?

Topic: the Day of the Dead in Mexican Catholicism · Focused question: how the ofrenda and graveside rites are performed and what they fuse · Likely sources: liturgical & folk-practice descriptions (primary), a community account, scholarship on syncretism and popular religion

A vivid, bounded festival whose blended origins make balance and interpretation natural; "official" and "popular" Catholic views give more than one perspective.

festivalrituallived religion

Ready to write it up properly?

The World Religions investigative-study frame walks you through every criterion — rationale, plan, findings, critical reflection — and the paid unlock builds your full evaluated study into one export-ready document.

Open the World Religions IA frame →

ETHICS, SOCIETY & CONTEMPORARY ISSUES

A focused contemporary issue within one tradition holds more than one perspective — exactly what the balance and critical-reflection marks reward.

8 · How do Jain dietary practices express the principle of ahimsa, and how are they adapted in diaspora communities?

Topic: Jain vegetarianism and food rules · Focused question: how diet enacts non-violence and how it changes outside India · Likely sources: Jain texts on ahimsa (primary), a diaspora practitioner's account, scholarship on Jainism and migration

A precise practice tied to a core principle, with a tradition-versus-change tension that gives the study genuine balance and a measured conclusion.

ethicslived religioncontemporary

9 · How do contemporary Buddhist environmental movements interpret interdependence as a basis for ecological ethics?

Topic: "eco-Buddhism" and engaged Buddhism · Focused question: how the doctrine of dependent origination is read into environmental action · Likely sources: teachings of named engaged Buddhist figures (primary), a practitioner group's materials, scholarship on Buddhism and ecology

A focused contemporary application of a classical doctrine; the debate over whether the reading is faithful or modern gives strong critical-reflection material.

ethicscontemporaryinterpretation

10 · How is the role of women in Orthodox Jewish prayer understood, and how is it negotiated by partnership minyanim?

Topic: women's participation in Orthodox Jewish worship · Focused question: how tradition is understood and how partnership minyanim reinterpret it · Likely sources: halakhic texts (primary), a community member's perspective, scholarship on gender and Orthodoxy

A live, bounded issue within one tradition with clearly opposed perspectives — ideal for balanced, sensitive evaluation rather than judgement.

ethicssocietycontemporary

11 · How do Amish communities justify their limited use of technology, and what does it reveal about beliefs on community and separation?

Topic: Amish (Ordnung) restrictions on technology · Focused question: how and why technologies are accepted or refused and what this expresses · Likely sources: Ordnung & Amish testimony (primary), documentary or interview material, scholarship on Anabaptist communities

A concrete, well-documented practice that visibly enacts a theology of separation; the insider rationale versus outsider readings supplies balance.

societylived religionbelief

SACRED TEXT & INTERPRETATION

Investigating how one passage or text is read across schools turns interpretation itself into the object of study.

12 · How is the Bhagavad Gita's teaching on duty (dharma) interpreted by different commentarial traditions?

Topic: dharma in the Bhagavad Gita · Focused question: how Shankara, Ramanuja and modern readings differ on duty and action · Likely sources: the Gita and its classical commentaries (primary), modern interpretations (e.g. Gandhi), scholarship on Hindu hermeneutics

Comparing named interpretive traditions makes analysis unavoidable; the range of readings gives a genuinely open question and a measured conclusion.

sacred textinterpretationdoctrine

13 · How is the concept of jihad interpreted in the Qur'an and across classical and modern Muslim scholarship?

Topic: the meanings of jihad · Focused question: how the term is read — greater/lesser, spiritual/martial — across sources · Likely sources: Qur'anic verses & hadith (primary), classical and modern scholarly readings, secondary surveys

A widely misunderstood concept whose range of scholarly readings demands careful, balanced interpretation — exactly what Criterion D rewards, handled sensitively.

sacred textinterpretationcontemporary

14 · How do Christian traditions interpret the Genesis creation accounts, and how is this shaped by views on science?

Topic: readings of Genesis 1-2 · Focused question: how literal, allegorical and figurative readings differ and why · Likely sources: the Genesis text & patristic commentary (primary), denominational statements, scholarship on faith and science

A single text passage read in clearly different ways gives a focused, evidence-rich study; the science question keeps it contemporary without losing the textual core.

sacred textinterpretationbelief

15 · How is the Sikh Guru Granth Sahib treated as a living Guru, and what does this reveal about scriptural authority?

Topic: the status of the Guru Granth Sahib · Focused question: how it is installed, attended and honoured and what this enacts · Likely sources: the scripture & Sikh code of conduct (primary), a gurdwara observation, scholarship on Sikh scriptural authority

A focused, observable practice that turns an abstract idea (scripture as Guru) into concrete, interpretable evidence with insider and scholarly perspectives.

sacred textworshipbelief

16 · How do Theravada and Mahayana sources understand the goal of nibbana / enlightenment differently?

Topic: the goal of the path across Buddhist schools · Focused question: how nibbana and the bodhisattva ideal are framed in each tradition's texts · Likely sources: Pali and Mahayana sutras (primary), comparative scholarship, a practitioner's account

A clearly bounded doctrinal comparison from named textual sources; the contrast gives balance and a real interpretive question rather than description.

sacred textdoctrineinterpretation

LIVED & CHANGING RELIGION

How a tradition is actually practised — and how it shifts in new contexts — gives you observable evidence and a tradition-versus-change tension to weigh.

17 · How is Shinto practised at a contemporary urban shrine, and how does it blend with everyday secular life in Japan?

Topic: lived Shinto at a city jinja · Focused question: how shrine visits and rites are observed and what role they play day to day · Likely sources: shrine practice descriptions (primary), a worshipper's account or observation, scholarship on Japanese religion

A focused, observable practice in a tradition seldom taught in class; the religion-or-custom tension gives genuine interpretive depth.

lived religionritualcontemporary

18 · How and why do Coptic Orthodox Christians observe fasting, and how is it sustained in diaspora?

Topic: Coptic fasting practice · Focused question: how the fasts are kept, why, and how migration reshapes them · Likely sources: Coptic liturgical & fasting rules (primary), a community member's account, scholarship on Coptic Christianity

A concrete, demanding practice in an under-studied tradition, with a clear tradition-and-change angle that rewards balanced evaluation.

lived religionritualcontemporary

19 · How do Rastafari understand the use of ganja as a sacrament, and how is this contested within the movement?

Topic: sacramental herb use in Rastafari · Focused question: how and why it is understood as sacred and where adherents disagree · Likely sources: Rastafari testimony & scriptural justification (primary), interview or documentary material, scholarship on Rastafari

A focused, source-rich practice in a tradition rarely studied formally; internal disagreement supplies the balance and the question's openness.

lived religionbeliefcontemporary

20 · How is a Hindu wedding ritual performed, and how is it adapted by second-generation diaspora families?

Topic: the Hindu marriage rite (vivaha) in diaspora · Focused question: how the saptapadi and key rites are kept, shortened or changed and why · Likely sources: ritual texts & a priest's guidance (primary), a family's account, scholarship on diaspora Hinduism

A bounded, observable ritual with a clear tradition-versus-adaptation tension; the gap between scriptural form and lived practice drives the analysis.

lived religionritualcontemporary

21 · How do contemporary Pagan or Wiccan groups construct ritual, and what does it reveal about invented and revived tradition?

Topic: ritual construction in modern Paganism · Focused question: how rites are designed and justified and how "old" they claim to be · Likely sources: practitioner ritual texts (primary), an observation or interview, scholarship on new religious movements

A focused practice in a new tradition with a built-in question about authenticity and revival — fertile, balanced ground for critical reflection.

lived religionritualcontemporary

22 · How is the Baha'i Nineteen Day Feast observed, and how does it bind belief, administration and community?

Topic: the Nineteen Day Feast in the Bahá'í Faith · Focused question: how its devotional, consultative and social parts work together · Likely sources: Bahá'í guidance on the Feast (primary), a community member's account, scholarship on Bahá'í community life

A bounded, well-documented gathering in an under-studied tradition; analysing how its three parts integrate gives interpretation beyond description.

lived religionworshipsociety

23 · How and why do some Muslim Sufi orders practise dhikr through music and movement, and how is it viewed within Islam?

Topic: Sufi devotional practice (e.g. sama / whirling) · Focused question: how dhikr is performed and why, and how it is judged by other Muslims · Likely sources: Sufi texts & poetry (primary), a practitioner or order's account, scholarship on Sufism

A vivid, focused practice with clearly contested perspectives inside the tradition, demanding balanced, sensitive interpretation rather than a verdict.

lived religionworshipinterpretation

24 · How do Indigenous Australian beliefs about Country shape relationship to land, and how are they understood today?

Topic: the concept of Country in an Aboriginal tradition · Focused question: how belief about land and the Dreaming shapes practice and care · Likely sources: community-authored and ethnographic accounts (primary), respectful scholarship, recorded testimony

A focused, deeply interpretable belief in a tradition rarely taught — handle with particular care, foregrounding community voices and avoiding appropriation, which itself sharpens the critical reflection.

belieflived religioncontemporary

From a topic to a top-band study

A topic is the easy part — the marks are in how you build it. The World Religions investigative study is marked out of 30 across five criteria: A Rationale & preliminary research /8, B Plan /3, C Summary of significant findings /6, D Critical reflection & evaluation /10 and E References & format /3 — in 1,500–1,800 words, on a tradition not studied in your course. Whichever topic you pick, the same moves win: a single focused question with a researched rationale, a clear plan, well-chosen findings from balanced primary and secondary sources, and — where most marks live — a perceptive critical reflection that evaluates your sources and findings sensitively rather than just reporting them, all accurately referenced.

Build your chosen idea into a full study

The examiner-written World Religions investigative-study frame takes you through every criterion with the rubric, worked good-and-bad examples and the traps that cost marks. The planning sections — rationale, preliminary research and plan — are free; unlock findings, critical reflection & evaluation and references to finish the whole study and export it to Word or PDF.

Open the World Religions IA frame →

World Religions IA ideas — FAQ

What makes a good IB World Religions IA topic?

A single focused belief, practice, ritual, experience or contemporary issue within ONE tradition that is not studied in your taught course. It must be answerable with real primary and secondary sources (scripture, ritual texts, a practitioner interview or observation, and scholarship), open enough to hold more than one perspective, and something you can investigate sensitively and interpret rather than merely describe. Phrase it as a "how" or "why" question.

How do I balance sources and stay sensitive?

Draw on both primary sources (scripture, ritual texts, an interview with or observation of a practitioner) and secondary scholarship, and reference every one accurately. Weigh insider and outsider views, and more than one perspective within the tradition, before reaching a measured conclusion. Treat a living faith with empathy — investigate and interpret, never preaching or judging whether a belief is "true". Sensitivity and balance carry marks, and critical reflection (Criterion D) carries the most.

How do I focus a topic that feels too broad?

Narrow from a whole religion or a sweeping theme to one concrete particular: a named practice, festival, text passage, ritual object or community. "Buddhism" or "prayer in world religions" can only be described; "how and why Tibetan Buddhists use prayer flags" can be investigated. Anchor the focus in specific evidence you can actually reach, choose an aspect not covered in your course, and turn it into a single "how" or "why" question.

How do I turn the idea into a top-band study?

Build it section by section in the free World Religions investigative-study frame — focused question and rationale, preliminary research, a plan, well-chosen findings from balanced sources, and a critical reflection that evaluates your sources and findings sensitively, with accurate references throughout.

📬 Free: the IA topic-picker checklist + examiner tips

Get the Topic-Picker & Top-Band Checklist (PDF) plus short, examiner-written tips for each stage of your IA — straight to your inbox. No spam, unsubscribe any time.

IA ideas for other subjects

Anthropology IA → Philosophy IA → History IA → All IA tools →