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FACULTY LEADER

Michael Kessler
Kessler
Michael Kessler is Associate Director of the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs at Georgetown University, a Visiting Assistant P... read more >>
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
January 2008

January 2003



RELATED EVENTS
November 8, 2010

September 30, 2010

December 14, 2009



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Law, Religion, and Values


The program in Law, Religion, and Values supports teaching, research, and scholarly conferences that explore how religion and values legitimate, shape, and conflict with global political, cultural, and legal systems in transnational and comparative perspective

The field of law and religion has become well-established over the past forty years, focusing largely on domestic issues of US constitutional law related to free exercise, establishment and, more recently, accommodation of diverse religious practices and international religious freedom. Yet fundamental theoretical questions persist. Increasing pluralism raises questions about the way that political and legal systems are legitimated. A variety of oft-conflicting perspectives inform our understanding of moral and political ideas of justice and right. Moral and religious values shape individual actions and institutional policy, but without a common horizon of shared tradition or meaning, creating tensions and policy disputes that redound to the most fundamental moral conflicts. And the increasingly globalized reality has radically reshaped the horizon of legal study and practice. Legal conflicts and remedies increasingly occur across borders, with many different participants, from individuals and governments to corporations and transnational NGOs. These factors, among others, have reshaped the issues confronting the field of law and religion, requiring sustained engagement with ethics, political theory, and theories of globalization. The program in Law, Religion, and Values explores how religion and values ground, shape, and conflict with global political, cultural, and legal systems in transnational and comparative perspective. Activities include:

* Supporting interdisciplinary scholarship and dialogue on the domestic and transnational-comparative intersections of law, religion, and values

* Create multiple learning opportunities for Georgetown students from across the campuses to engage with the complexities of the global intersection of law, religion, and values, including the Law and Religion Seminar enrolling both Main Campus and Law Center students

* Elevate public discourse about these issues through events, publications, and knowledge resources aimed at the general public, academic discourses, and government/policy professionals

RELATED PROJECTS

Religion and Electoral Politics
In collaboration with EJ Dionne and the Georgetown Public Policy Institute, the Center regularly sponsors events about the role of religion in US electoral politics. In January 2008 Sojourners and the Berkley Center co-hosted an evening of discussion and debate on Jim Wallis’s latest book, The Great Awakening: Reviving Faith & Politics in a Post–Religious Right America. E.J. Dionne provided commentary. In April 2008, Dionne event presented his book Souled Out: Faith and Politics after the Religious Right. In addition, Senator Sam Brownback (R-Kansas), one of the candidates for the Republican nomination in 2008, event discussed his views on faith and national and international affairs with Georgetown’s President John J. DeGioia. The Center also hosts two databases, Faith in the 2008 Election and Faith in the 2012 Election, which track religious rhetoric in the 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns.

Future of Political Theologies

The Berkley Center’s Future of Political Theologies project maps and analyzes historic and contemporary understandings of political engagement across Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. The Berkley Center project engages political theologies not merely as a set of theoretical concepts, but as religious beliefs and principles that ground political action within contemporary geo-political struggles. The Project brings together leading thinkers and practitioners within each tradition – as well as secular counterparts – to examine the contested intersection between religious conviction and the political arena.

Project Rebirth
The Berkley Center helps lead Georgetown's partnership with Project Rebirth and the National September 11 Memorial & Museum.