Pagan studies has been charged with failing to properly define "paganism", as some scholars use it solely to designate contemporary Paganism and others – like Michael York and Chas Clifton – using it to refer to a wide range of religious movements across the world and throughout history. While some scholars have treated the term as a singular religion within which groups like Wicca and Heathenry are
denominations, others have instead treated it as a "group of
comparative religions". A further problem arises from the fact that while Pagan studies scholars might adopt "paganism" in reference to pre-Christian belief systems in Europe, the term was increasingly rejected by
archaeologists specialising in those belief systems. The concern has been made that Pagan studies scholars would be "at a loss to convey (to ourselves and to others), what it is that we are actually studying. The current situation, in which widely differing definitions are being used in tandem, is clearly unsustainable." The religious studies scholar Markus Altena Davidsen published a critique of the field in 2012, via a review of the
Handbook of Contemporary Paganism. He argued that Pagan studies was dominated by an
essentialist and
normative view of its subject rather than a
naturalist and theoretically oriented approach. Ethan Doyle White in
The Pomegranate, argued that there were flaws in Davidsen's approach. Arguing that the
Handbook of Contemporary Paganism was not as symptomatic of the field as Davidsen had assumed, he went on to identify a number of factual errors within Davidsen's paper. Doyle White argued that Davidsen's division of scholars into firmly insider and outsider categories was problematic as scholars of Pagan studies like
Sabina Magliocco straddled both boundaries, an approach based in the methodologies employed in
anthropology. In 2016, Doyle White offered his own critique of the field. He addressed the various definitions of "contemporary paganism", the need for a clearer definition of Pagan studies, and the relationship between Pagan studies and pagan activism, arguing for a reform of the field. ==Relationship with Pagan community==