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Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly

Camden Priest, Social Entrepreneurship in the Philippines

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John Hamre - Religion and America’s Role in the World

John Hamre - Religion and America’s Role in the World

John Hamre, president and CEO of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, remarks on the importance of the religious impulse in foreign policy and government’s “intellectual blinders” when it comes to understanding religion’s role.

India's Slum Dwellers

India's Slum Dwellers

Jockin Arputham started his campaign to build a network among the urban poor by organizing a critical mass of India's slum-dwelling population, especially women’s collectives. Today they pressure local governments to be more responsive to their needs, especially toilet and sanitation facilities.

Sikh Saint-Soldier

Sikh Saint-Soldier

The word “Sikh” means student or disciple. Sikhs have three basic core beliefs — constant meditation and remembrance of the Creator, the importance of earning a living by honest and hard work, and the importance of justice and freedom for all. The Khalsa is a brotherhood of Sikhs, who publicly take

Jewish Burial Practices

Jewish Burial Practices

The Jewish tradition of tahara, the washing and purifying of a dead body, is considered one of the greatest of all good deeds — mitzvot. Those who perform taharas are volunteer members of the burial society, chevra kadisha. Women attend to deceased women, men to men.

A Story of One's Own

A Story of One's Own

A Sikh American, Valarie began organizing against hate crimes after a family friend was murdered in Arizona in the first hate crime committed after 9/11. Kaur’s activism is rooted in dispelling stereotypes and telling stories that humanize us as Americans. She talks about her partnership with America Ferrera

John Green Extended Interview

John Green Extended Interview

"Candidates do often benefit from talking about their personal faith, but once that becomes politicized it can create some real problems for them, so they tend to stick to other sets of issues,” says University of Akron professor John Green. Watch more of our interview with him about the

Missing Migrant Project

Missing Migrant Project

Finding out for the families of the missing what happened to border crossers who disappeared is "the sacred baseline” for her work," says anthropologist Robin Reineke, cofounder of the Missing Migrant Project at the Colibri Center for Human Rights in Tucson, Arizona. "Care of the dead is

Evangelicals and Politics

Evangelicals and Politics

An overwhelming number of all white evangelicals, 70 percent, are Republican or lean toward the political right. The one reason more than any is abortion, which has been and still is a defining issue for most evangelicals. But not all evangelicals share the same view on abortion or politics.

Supreme Court and Affirmative Action

Supreme Court and Affirmative Action

Racial diversity is only “one factor among many” in admissions decisions, according to the University of Texas vice president for diversity. But if the Supreme Court decides to abandon racial preferences, what will become of the pursuit of racial justice in education?

Evangelicals and Culture

Evangelicals and Culture

Between evangelicals and the secular world around them, who is having the greater influence on whom? In RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY’s national survey, nearly three quarters of white evangelicals said the media are hostile to their values. Yet they have also created their own widely popular alternative music and

Adam Taylor: Hunger, Nutrition, and the G8

Adam Taylor: Hunger, Nutrition, and the G8

World Vision’s Vice President of Advocacy and Government Relations says the leaders attending this weekend’s G8 summit in Washington should invest in agricultural and nutrition programs to lift people out of poverty because “it’s the right thing to do, it’s the moral thing to do, and