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ETHICS AND INTERSECTIONALITY SERIES While coming from varied backgrounds and experience, collectively the contributors to Organizing Visions offer a vital overview of the current state of Christian social ethics and its rich relation to organizing movements. Organizing Visions makes the case that Christian social ethics emerged out of and in conversation with major social movements in U.S. history and is defined today by a commitment to studying these movements to grasp where they may be going. Contributors include the editors and: Carolyn Baker, The General Baker Institute Malinda Elizabeth…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
ETHICS AND INTERSECTIONALITY SERIES While coming from varied backgrounds and experience, collectively the contributors to Organizing Visions offer a vital overview of the current state of Christian social ethics and its rich relation to organizing movements. Organizing Visions makes the case that Christian social ethics emerged out of and in conversation with major social movements in U.S. history and is defined today by a commitment to studying these movements to grasp where they may be going. Contributors include the editors and: Carolyn Baker, The General Baker Institute Malinda Elizabeth Berry, Anabaptist Mennonite Biblical Seminary K. B. Brower, Bargaining for the Common Good, Action Center on Race & the Economy Stacey Floyd-Thomas, Vanderbilt University Nicholas Hayes-Mota, Santa Clara University Peter Laarman, United Church of Christ minister; former executive director, Progressive Christians Uniting Cynthia Moe-Lobeda, Pacific Lutheran Theological Seminary and Church Divinity School of the Pacific Christophe D. Ringer, Chicago Theological Seminary C. Melissa Snarr, Vanderbilt University Joseph Strife, formerly of the Kairos Center for Religions, Rights, and Social Justice, NYC Colleen Wessel-McCoy, Earlham School of Religion
Autorenporträt
Gary Dorrien is Reinhold Niebuhr Professor of Social Ethics, Union Theological Seminary, NYC, and professor of religion, Columbia University. He has authored many books in theology, philosophy, social ethics, political economics, and intellectual history, most recently a memoir, Over from Union Road: My Christian-Left-Intellectual Life. Charlene Sinclair has been a community organizer for over twenty years, working with national and local organizations to develop comprehensive grassroots organizing and political strategies as well as policy and power analysis. Aaron Stauffer is associate director of the Wendland-Cook Program in Religion and Justice, Vanderbilt Divinity School. An ordained Minister of Word and Sacrament in the PC(USA), he served as executive director of and then special advisor to Religions for Peace USA.