This volume explores how religious leaders can contribute to cultures of peace around the world. The essays are written by leading and emerging scholars and practitioners who have lived, taught, or worked in the areas of conflict about which they write. Connecting the theory and practice of religious peacebuilding to illuminate key challenges facing interreligious dialogue and interreligious peace work, the volume is explicitly interreligious, intercultural, and global in perspective. The chapters approach religion and peace from the vantage point of security studies, sociology, ethics, ecology, theology, and philosophy. A foreword by David Smock, the Vice President of Governance, Law and Society and Director of the Religion and Peacebuilding Center at the United States Institute of Peace, outlines the current state of the field.
Foreword. Religion and Cultures of Peace; David Smock, Vice President of the United States Institute of Peace, USA
Introduction. Interfaith Contributions to Nurturing Cultures of Peace; Douglas Irvin-Erickson, George Mason University, USA
1. Peacekeeping, Peacemaking, Peacebuilding: An Interreligious Spirituality for Just Peace; Peter C. Phan, Georgetown University, USA
2. Sprit Cults, Religion, and Performative Peace in Cambodia; Douglas Irvin-Erickson, George Mason University, USA
3. From Tourist to Friend: Vulnerability and Accountability in Short-term International Peacemaking Delegations; Sarah E. MacDonald, Emory University, USA
4. Radical Love and Forgiveness as Foundation of Reconciliation: A Theological Imagination for GKI Yasmin Case in Indonesia; Hans Abdiel Harmakaputra, Bostonlâ