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  • Contributors

Ilsup Ahn is a professor of philosophy at North Park University, where he teaches various topics in ethics. He is the author of Theology and Migration (Brill, 2019) and Just Debt: Theology, Ethics, and Neoliberalism (Baylor, 2017). His research interests include immigration justice, neoliberal economy, political theology, and Asian American studies.

Carol P. Christ (Ph.D. Yale, Religious Studies) is a pioneer in the study of women and religion, co-editor with Judith Plaskow of the path-breaking anthologies Womanspirit Rising and Weaving the Visions, with Judith Plaskow co-author of Goddess and God in the World, and author of Diving Deep and Surfacing, Laughter of Aphrodite, A Serpentine Path (Odyssey with the Goddess), Rebirth of the Goddess, and She Who Changes. She has taught at Columbia University and San Jose State. She lives in Greece where she has run for national and regional office with the Green Party and leads Goddess Pilgrimages to Crete (www.goddessariadne.org). She is writing on Religion in a Minoan Village for the archaeological team excavating Gournia in Crete.

Paul Hedges is Associate Professor in the SRP Programme, RSIS, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He has published fourteen books (most recently Understanding Religion and Religious Hatred) and over seventy academic papers.

Terrance MacMullan is a Professor of Philosophy at Eastern Washington University where he teaches classes on Latin American philosophy, pop culture and philosophy, and political philosophy. A native of Santurce, Puerto Rico, his next book, From Empire to Community through Inter-American Philosophy: Prospero's Reflection (Lexington Press) imagines how a broader Inter-American Philosophy would revitalize our democratic communities and heal the wounds caused by a century of US imperialism in Latin America.

James Harry Morris MTheol, PhD, FRAS is an Assistant Professor at the University of Tsukuba in Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan. His research primarily focuses on the history of Christianity in Japan and Christian-Muslim Relations. Currently he is completing a two-year research project on the history of Christian-Muslim Relations in Japan and China funded by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.

Robert Vivian's latest book is All I Feel Is Rivers, published in 2020 by the Univ. of Nebraska Press. He is the author of nine other books.

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