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Full Description
Even though America was founded upon a belief that its mission was providentially ordained, its foreign policy decisions have failed to recognize the growing significance of religious faith as a global concern. With an eye on the turbulent century ahead, God and Global Order implores policy makers to recognize the power of faith to inform and enhance U.S. foreign policy. The contributors warn that ignoring the far-reaching role of faiths (those both religious and secular) and their influence upon international agendas could carry disastrous consequences--both for the U.S. and for the larger global order.
Contents
Introduction: Naming Religion Truthfully, Jonathan Chaplin with Robert Joustra
Part I: Taking Religion Seriously
Chapter 1: Reviving Religion in the History of American Foreign Relations, Andrew Preston (Cambridge University)
Chapter 2: Bringing Religion Back into Religious Freedom Policy, Thomas F. Farr (Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs and Georgetown University)
Chapter 3: Understanding Radical Islam, Paul Marshall (Center for Religious Freedom at the Hudson Institute)
Chapter 4: Three Zionisms in the Shaping of American Foreign Policy, James W. Skillen (Center for Public Justice)
Part II: Enlisting Religion Diplomatically
Chapter 5: American Religion and European Anti-Americanism, Thomas Albert Howard (Gordon College, Massachussetts)
Chapter 6: Getting Russia Right, John A. Bernbaum (Russian-American Christian University in Moscow)
Chapter 7: The Ethics of Humanitarian Intervention: Rethinking the Implications of Neighbor Love, J. Daryl Charles (Bryan College)
Chapter 8: Why U.S. Foreign Policy in Iraq Needs an Ethic of Political Reconciliation and How Religion Can Supply It, Daniel Philpott (University of Notre Dame)
Chapter 9: Response: Reading Religion Rightly The ""Clash of Rival Apostasies"" amidst the Global Resurgence of Religion, Scott M. Thomas (University of Bath, U.K.)
Conclusion, Jonathan Chaplin with Robert Joustra