Lexington Books
Pages: 150
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-2669-1 • Hardback • May 2009 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-7391-2670-7 • Paperback • May 2009 • $54.99 • (£42.00)
978-0-7391-3762-8 • eBook • May 2009 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
James W. Skillen is president of the Center for Public Justice, Washington D.C.
Chapter 1 To Look at the World Entirely Afresh
Chapter 2 Kaleidoscopic Change in World Affairs: Emerging Patterns of Sovereignty and Governance
Chapter 3 Faith and Globalization
Chapter 4 Globalization and the State: A View from Economics
Chapter 5 The New Silk Road: Central Asia at the Global Crossroads
Chapter 6 Schooling and the Not-So-Sovereign State
Chapter 7 Evangelical Christians: The New Internationalists?
Chapter 8 Contending Ways of Life
This study of America's role in the world is timely. Many of the authors write from a perspective that might be called the 'evangelical left' and engage a wide range of topics all touching on the changes globalization has generated. The conversations begun in this book can help many, including many Christians, to understand these extraordinary times.
— Peter D. Feaver, Duke University
Few challenges and dynamics of this century are so widely recognized yet poorly fathomed as those brought on by globalization. Prophets glibly herald the infinite horizons of opportunity that globalization presents. Critics warn of the carnage and wreckage wrought in its wake. But rare are the voices that can help us interpret the religious and civic implications at stake. This timely work fills that hollow, reminding us that—as with earlier moments of globalization—religious ideas, actors, institutions, and commitments are shaping and responding to global processes at work today. Skillen and company deliver here a sturdy guide for understanding, appreciating, and evaluating the defining contours of the global plates and strata shifting uncertainly beneath our feet. They steady us and reassure us that religious faith remains an indissoluble force for responsible global engagement and transformation.
— John D. Carlson, Arizona State University
Perhaps globalization, even more than postmodernity, is the dominant spirit of our times. This makes it one of the greatest challenges facing the twenty-first century. It is therefore essential that the Christian community, among others, grapple seriouslywith this reality. There are few more trustworthy guides through the tangled thicket of globalization than Jim Skillen. He has gathered together a fine group of scholars to address this issue from various disciplinary standpoints, offering an insightfulopening and conclusion that bind them all together...
— Michael V. Goheen, Trinity Western University
Perhaps globalization, even more than postmodernity, is the dominant spirit of our times. This makes it one of the greatest challenges facing the twenty-first century. It is therefore essential that the Christian community, among others, grapple seriously with this reality. There are few more trustworthy guides through the tangled thicket of globalization than Jim Skillen. He has gathered together a fine group of scholars to address this issue from various disciplinary standpoints, offering an insightfulopening and conclusion that bind them all together.
— Michael V. Goheen, Trinity Western University