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  • Contributors

G. Scott Davis is the Lewis T. Booker Professor of Religion and Ethics at the University of Richmond. His most recent book is Believing and Acting: The Pragmatic Turn in Comparative Religion and Ethics.

David Decosimo is assistant professor of theology at Boston University. His first book, Ethics as a Work of Charity: Thomas Aquinas and Pagan Virtue, appeared in 2014. Currently, he is working on two books: one on domination in Christianity and Islam, the other on the relation between theology and ethics in Christian thought and practice.

Shannon Dunn is assistant professor in the religious studies department at Gonzaga University, where she works on questions related to politics and religious legal and moral traditions.

Rosemary B. Kellison is assistant professor of philosophy and religion at the University of West Georgia. Her research focuses on feminist moral philosophy and ethics of war.

Atalia Omer (Harvard PhD in Religious Studies, Spring 2008) is associate professor of sociology and peace studies at the University of Notre Dame. She is the author of When Peace Is Not Enough: How the Israeli Peace Camp Thinks about Religion, Nationalism, and Justice (University of Chicago Press, 2013) and co-editor with Scott Appleby and David Little of the Oxford Handbook of Religion, Conflict and Peacebuilding (Oxford University Press, 2015). [End Page v]

Jason A. Springs is associate professor of religion, ethics, and peace studies at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame, where he also holds an appointment as faculty fellow in the Center for the Study of Religion and Society. His research addresses conceptions of religious toleration and moral and religious pluralism as resources for transforming conflict in Europe and the United States. His work addressing religion and conflict in public life appear in Journal of Religion, Journal of Religious Ethics, and the Journal of the American Academy of Religion.

Nahed Artoul Zehr is assistant professor of Islam and religious studies at Western Kentucky University. Her research lies at the intersection of religion, ethics, and international relations, with a particular emphasis on the Western and Islamic just war traditions. [End Page vi]

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