RELATED PROGRAM
Religious Freedom Project
RELATED EVENTS
May 31, 2013
The Good Muslim and Religious Freedom
February 12, 2013
Rick Warren on Religious Freedom - A Conversation
January 7, 2013
Theism and Rationality: A Seminar with Alvin Plantinga and Ernest Sosa
December 14, 2012
Inaugural Symposium: Christianity and Freedom: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
December 7, 2012
Policy Consultation on Religious Freedom, Violent Religious Extremism, and Constitutional Reform in Muslim-Majority Countries: Lessons for U.S. Policy Makers
October 24, 2012
Religious Freedom Past and Future
October 11, 2012
Which Model, Whose Liberty?: Differences between the U.S. and European Approaches to Religious Freedom
September 14, 2012
Just and Unjust Peace
September 13, 2012
Catholic Perspectives on Religious Liberty
June 28, 2012
Religious Freedom and the HHS Mandate: a Conversation with Representatives Jeff Fortenberry, Diane Black, Ann Marie Buerkle and Dan Lipinski
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AT THE CENTER
EVENTS (57)
PUBLICATIONS (90)
Report of the Georgetown Symposium on Religious Freedom and Religious Extremism: Lessons from the Arab Spring
September 1, 2012
September 1, 2012
INTERVIEWS (84)
A Discussion with Ambassador Ochieng Adala, Executive Director of Africa Peace Forum in Nairobi, Kenya
July 14, 2010
July 14, 2010
A Discussion with Robert A. Seiple, First US Ambassador for International Religious Freedom
October 29, 2009
October 29, 2009
LETTERS (73)
POSTS (17)
RELATED RESOURCES: RELIGIOUS FREEDOM
Journal of Church and State Reviews Book God and Global Order, an Edited Volume with Contributions from RFP Director Tom Farr and Associate Scholar Dan Philpott
Thomas Farr, Daniel Philpott
June 20, 2011
Stuart Croft reviews "God and Global Order: The Power of Religion in American Foreign Policy" in the Winter 2011 volume of the Journal of Church and State. The book, edited by Jonathan Chaplin with Robert Joustra, includes chapters by Religious Freedom Project Director Tom Farr and Religious Freedom Project Associate Scholar Daniel Philpott. The volume offers a critique of the current resistance of American foreign policy actors to substantially integrate the knowledge of religion into its diplomatic practices and warns of the consequences to American international interests sustained ignorance of this issue could produce.