In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Contributors

Nigel Biggar is Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology, and director of the McDonald Centre for Theology, Ethics, and Public Life, at the University of Oxford.

Lisa Sowle Cahill is the Monan Professor of Theology at Boston College. She is the author of Global Justice, Christology and Christian Ethics (Cambridge, 2013) and is completing “Love Your Enemies”: Just War, Pacifism, and Peacebuilding, second edition.

G. Scott Davis has held the Lewis T. Booker Professorship in Religion and Ethics at the University of Richmond since 1994. Prior to that he taught at Columbia and Princeton Universities. Davis writes on theories and methods, the history of ethics, and the just war tradition.

John Feldmann holds an undergraduate degree in economics from Hampden-Sydney College and a JD and PhD from the University of Virginia. He has worked in law and banking and served as a policy advisor to both government and private sector clients. He is currently a macropolitical analyst in the investment industry.

James Turner Johnson is Distinguished Professor of Religion at Rutgers. He has written eleven books dealing with just war and edited or coedited three others. His most recent book is Sovereignty: Moral and Historical Perspectives (Georgetown University Press, 2014).

Rosemary B. Kellison is assistant professor of philosophy and religion in the Department of English and Philosophy at University of West Georgia. Her current project draws on feminist and pragmatist moral philosophy in just war reasoning, particularly in relation to the contemporary U.S. war in Afghanistan. [End Page i]

Charles Mathewes is Carolyn M. Barbour Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Virginia. His books include Evil and the Augustinian Tradition and The Republic of Grace.

Cian O’Driscoll is senior lecturer in politics at the University of Glasgow, a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Young Academy, and coeditor of Just War: Authority, Tradition, Practice (with Anthony F. Lang Jr. and John Williams; Georgetown University Press, 2013). Cian co-convenes the Glasgow Global Security Network.

Nahed Artoul Zehr is assistant professor of Islam and religious studies at Western Kentucky University, teaching on Islam, the just war tradition, comparative ethics, and religious violence. She has published in the Journal of Religious Ethics and the Journal of Military Ethics and is working on a manuscript on the war on terror. [End Page ii]

...

pdf

Share