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Syllabi
Addressing Workers and Social Justice
Faculty
dedicated to teaching students about worker and economic justice
issues have contributed these syllabi. The material on this website
comes from various academic disciplines and faith traditions. Thanks
to Rev. Joan Martin, Ph.D., Episcopal Divinity School, and Jacquelyn
O'Sullivan, Research Assistant, for helping compile and organize
these syllabi.
If
you would like to post relevant syllabi or resources on the website
please download
the permission form and email to Joy
Heine or
fax 773-728-8409.
Sorted
by Topic | Return
to Main Syllabi List
Sorted by
Type of Institution/Religion
NEW—Applied
Christian Ethics, David Wheeler, Ph.D., San Francisco
Theological Seminary, Pasadena, California.
Business
Ethics (Women's Studies),
Rev. Gloria Albrecht, Ph.D., University
of Detroit Mercy.
Changing
the Rules of the Game:
Feminism and Economics, Pamela K. Brubaker, Ph.D.,
California Lutheran University, Thousand Oaks,
California.
Christian
Ethics,
Rev. Gloria Albrecht, Ph.D., University
of Detroit Mercy.
Church,
Power, Justice,
Jerome Baggett, Ph.D., Jesuit School of
Theology at Berkeley, Berkeley, California.
The
Church, Economic Life, and the Meaning
of Work, Eugene TeSelle, Ph.D., Vanderbilt Divinity School,
Nashville, Tennessee.
The
Church and the Struggle for Economic Justice, Rev. Wayne
Stumme, Ph.D., Trinity Lutheran Seminary, Columbus, Ohio.
Community,
Jobs, and the New Economy: Strategies for Change, Virginia
Parks, Ph.D., The
School of Social Service Administration, University
of Chicago.
Community
Organizing,
Kim Bobo, Iliff School of Theology, Denver,
Colorado.
Contemporary
Issues in Christian Social Ethics: Ethics
of Vocation and Work in Church and Society, Rev. Joan
Martin, Ph. D., Episcopal Divinity School,
Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Dimensions
and Dynamic of Urban Ministry: The Gospel
in the City, Rev. Yvonne Delk, Ph.D.,
Seminary Consortium for Urban Pastoral Education (SCUPE), Chicago.
Economics
and the Christian Faith. James H. Weaver, Ph.D., Wesley
Theological Seminary, Washington, D.C.
Educating
for Social Justice Ministry,
Rev. Rebekah Jordan, Garrett-Evangelical
Theological Seminary, Evanston, Illinois.
Ethical
Issues in Economics & Business, Rev. John
T. Pawlikowski, OSM, Ph.D., Catholic Theological Union.
Ethics
and Economic Theories, Rev. Gloria Albrecht, Ph.D.,
University of Detroit Mercy.
Ethics,
Economics and Liberation, Fr. Thomas Massaro,
S.J., Ph.D., Weston Jesuit School of
Theology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Faith,
Labor, and Economic Life, Rev. Mark Wendorf,
Richard Perry, Ph.D., Rev. Kazi
Joshua, and Ms. Kim Bobo, Association
for Chicago Theological Schools.
Good
News for the City: Paradigms and
Prophetic Leaders for Urban Mininstry
in the 21st Century,
Rev. Yvonne Delk, Ph.D., Seminary
Consortium for Urban Pastoral
Education (SCUPE), Chicago.
Immigration,
Politics, and Religion in a Hemispheric
Perspective, Manuel A. Vásquez and Philip J. Williams,
University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.
Intro
to Christian Ethics,
Pamela K. Brubaker, Ph.D., California
Lutheran University, Thousand Oaks,
California.
NEW—Introduction
to Christian Ethics: Economic Justice, Carol Robb,
San Francisco Theological Seminary.
Introduction
to Catholic Social Ethics, Fr. Thomas Massaro, S.J., Ph.D.,
Weston Jesuit School of Theology, Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
Issues
of Justice, Aryeh Cohen, Ph. D., University
of Judaism - Ziegler School of Rabbinic
Studies.
NEW—Jesus
Was a Carpenter: Faith Perspectives on Labor and Justice,
Peter R. Gathje, Ph.D., and Rev. Rebekah Jordan, Memphis
Theological Seminary.
NEW—Readings
In Religion and Social Change, Melissa James, DM,
Wartburg College, Waverly, Iowa.
Religion,
Democracy and Civil Society, Jerome Baggett, Ph.D.,
Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley, Berkeley, California.
Theories
and Strategies of Community Change,
Virginia Parks, Ph.D., The School of Social Service Administration,
University of Chicago. Women
Do Count: Feminism and Economics, Pamela K. Brubaker,
Ph.D., California Lutheran University,
Thousand Oaks, California.
Work,
Family and Ecology, Fr. Thomas Massaro, S.J., Ph.D.,
Weston Jesuit School of Theology, Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
For more
information. . .
If you would like more
information or want
to get involved in
this project, please
contact Joy Heine,
Project Director, Religious Perspectives on Work, Interfaith Worker
Justice, 1020 West
Bryn Mawr, 4th Floor,
Chicago,
IL 60660, or (773)
728-8400 ext. 33. |