Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 242
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4422-3539-7 • Hardback • August 2014 • $124.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4422-3540-3 • eBook • August 2014 • $117.50 • (£91.00)
About the editor
Eric Patterson is dean of the School of Government and associate professor of political science at Regent University. He is also senior research fellow at Georgetown University’s Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs. He is the author or editor of nine books, including Ending Wars Well: Just War Thinking and Post-Conflict (2012) and a Choice Highly Recommended Title, Ethics Beyond War's End ( 2012). Patterson served as a White House Fellow and at the State Department’s Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, and has nearly seventeen years of continuing service as an officer in the Air National Guard. He has been a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a member of the International Institute for Strategic Studies.
About the contributors
Rabbi Captain Jon Cutler was director of Religious Affairs for Combined Joint Task Force - Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA).
Ron E. Hassner is Associate Professor in International Relations at the University of California, Berkeley and a co-director of Berkeley’s Religion, Politics and Globalization Program.
Lashanda Hess-Hernandez is Assistant to the Dean and Oxford Program Coordinator at Robertson School of Government.
Colonel (Ret) Mike Hoyt served over 30 years active duty at every level of the Army Chaplaincy and joint command staffs. As the Director for Army Chaplain Corps Operations, the Pentagon, Chaplain Hoyt helped shape the strategic and institutional issues supporting the Army Chaplaincy for the next ten years.
Chaplain (LtCol) Eric Keller (U.S. Army, ret.) provided critical state-side support within the Army chaplaincy following 9/11.
Padre (LtCol) Steve Moore has served as a chaplain in the Canadian Forces for 22 years. His operational tours include Bosnia during the war (1993), Haiti (1997) and the Kandahar Provincial Reconstruction Team, Afghanistan for research purposes (2006).
Commander Dayne E. Nix, CHC, USN (Ret.), served twenty-seven years in the U.S. Marine Corps and Navy. He currently teaches joint maritime operations for the U.S. Naval War College at the Naval Postgraduate School, in Monterey, California.
Pauletta Otis is Professor of Security Studies at the Command and Staff College, Marine Corps University. She has served as a member of the Defense Intelligence Advisory Board and in a senior advisory capacity for the U.S. military chaplains.
Gary E. Roberts is Associate Professor of Government at Regent University. Previously, he was a tenured faculty member at Fairleigh Dickinson University and the University of Memphis.
LtCol David West is the founder Central Command’s Center of Excellence of Af-Pak. Working with the support of then U.S. Central Command commander General David Petraeus, he met with religious leaders, including Wahhabi and Deobandi madrassa leaders from Pakistan.
Chaplain (Colonel) Eric Wester has thirty-two years of military service culminating as a senior military chaplain and Army colonel, and nine years as a senior military leader in chaplaincy at senior command and strategic education.
Foreword, Major General Douglas Carver(ret.), former U.S. Army Chief of Chaplains
Chapter 1: Introduction: The Modern Military Chaplaincy in the Era of Intervention and Terrorism, Eric Patterson
Chapter 2: Yesterday and Today: Understanding the Role and Influence of the U.S. Military Chaplaincy, Pauletta Otis
Chapter 3: Chaplains Advising Warfighters on Culture and Religion, Dayne Nix
Chapter 4: Beginnings: The Army Chaplaincy Responds to the War on Terrorism, Eric Keller
Chapter 5: The Iraq Inter-Religious Congress and the Baghdad Accords, Micheal Hoyt
Chapter 6: Building National Capacity: Training Afghan Chaplains, Steven Moore
Chapter 7: Religious Advisement and Religious Leader Engagement in the Horn of Africa, Jon Cutler
Chapter 8: Advising Generals at the CENTCOM Center of Excellence, David West
Chapter 9: Spiritual Resiliency: Findings from the U.S. Army “Health of the Force” Surveys (2008-present), Eric Wester
Chapter 10: Spiritual and Professional Formation Under Stress: A Survey of Military Chaplains, Gary Roberts and L. Diane Hess-Hernandez
Chapter 11: Chaplains, Religion, and the Study of International Relations, Jason Klocek and Ronald Hassner
It is unlikely that a military chaplain can find a more complete expression of God's calling to serve Him and His people than in the work of building bridges with religious leaders from other nations. Each of us brings our own unique gifts to the peace-building effort but the mission to become stronger partners and care for our warriors remains the same. This book defines the proposal, the process, the potential and some of the pitfalls we face as military chaplains in a new era of 'loving our neighbor as ourselves' while serving our women and men in uniform. It is precisely what we need and it’s long overdue.
— Brian R. Van Sickle, USAF (ret); Former Command Chaplain USEUCOM