Scarecrow Press
Pages: 426
Trim: 9 x 11½
978-0-8108-8266-9 • Hardback • April 2012 • $142.00 • (£109.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-0-8108-8275-1 • eBook • April 2012 • $134.50 • (£104.00)
Michael L. Coulter, Ph.D., is professor of political science and humanities at Grove City College. He has contributed to Perspectives on Political Science, The Journal of Markets and Morality, Encyclopedia of the Supreme Court, Family in America, and Encyclopedia of American Religion and Politics.
Richard S. Myers is professor of law at Ave Maria School of Law. He is co-editor of St. Thomas Aquinas and the Natural Law Tradition: Contemporary Perspectives. He has published extensively on constitutional law, including articles in the law reviews of Ave Maria School of Law, Catholic University, Notre Dame, and Washington & Lee. He is the Vice-President of University Faculty for Life and the Executive Secretary of the Society of Catholic Social Scientists.
Joseph A. Varacalli, Ph.D., is S.U.N.Y. Distinguished Service Professor and Director of the Center for Catholic Studies at Nassau Community College-S.U.N.Y. Co-founder of the Society of Catholic Social Scientists, his most recent book publications are The Catholic Experience in America and Bright Promise, Failed Community: Catholics and the American Public Order (Lexington, 2001).
The first two volumes of this encyclopedia of Catholic matter were published in 2007, and this first supplemental volume adds another 202 entries on events that have occurred during the intervening five years, and on matters that either were deferred from the original volumes or have become more important in public debates since then. Among the discussions are Pope Benedict XVI's recent encyclicals, a statement on ethical implications of biomedical research, and recent social science research that bears on Catholic teaching. The full index for the third volume is accompanied by an index of entries and authors for all three volumes.
— Book News, Inc.
Following Volumes 1 and 2, which were released in 2007, this book aims to fill informational gaps and explicate the Church’s perspective on new controversies, including scientific advances and related moral concerns. Coulter (Family in America), Richard S. Myers (Thomas Aquinas), and Joseph A. Varacalli (Bright Promise) gather the research of nearly 120 field specialists. Also covered in the alphabetically organized, multiparagraph entries are figures who have shaped or opposed Catholic social thought, such as Albert Camus and Richard Dawkins. VERDICT Occasionally, subtle editorializing accompanies explanations of Church perspective. Otherwise, this is a valuable, accessible guide to Church principles as they relate to specific issues and people.
— Library Journal
As a reference book, the Encyclopedia lives up to the editors' claim that is "represents a distinctive contribution to academic scholarship."...It belongs in every library, not least because it "clearly presents a Catholic alternative in intellectual and moral public discourse.
— Touchstone: A Journal Of Mere Christianity
This work is a reliable and useful Catholic handbook on American and global social issues theoretically and theologically constructed and practically applied. Those libraries holding the original two-volume set will want to add this supplemental edition to their collection.
— American Reference Books Annual
The supplement is a useful work in its own right. . . . It sets out rightly to show practical Catholic thinking is not a mile away from the best theologically-informed social science research in the field[.]
— Reference Reviews
Five years after the publication of the two-volume Encyclopedia of Catholic Social Thought, Social Science, and Social Policy, a supplemental third volume now has been published. As the only such encyclopedia. . . currently available in English, these volumes make a unique and very helpful scholarly resource.The editors produced the volumes with the aim of applying 'a Catholic sensibility and critique to a wide variety of aspects of social existence, from intellectual and scholarly disciplines, to culture and institutional structures, to the strategies and possibilities of government intervention in the lives of the citizenry' (xi). On the whole, the volumes succeed in their given task. . . . The same standard of quality and approach evident in the first volumes is maintained in the supplemental volume. Libraries that hold the original two-volume set should add the supplement to their collection; those lacking this resource should add all three volumes.
— Catholic Social Science Review