Theology of Community Organizing

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Agape Love
Author_Chris Shannahan
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Chris Baker
Citizen Organising Foundation
Citizen UK
Civil Society
Civil Society Politics
Community Organizing
Contemporary Community Organizing
Divine Bias
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Faith Based Community
Faith Based Community Organizing
Faith Groups
Gamaliel Foundation
Holistic Listening
Identity Politics
Intercultural Hermeneutics
Liberation Theology
Liberative Difference
Liberative Reversals
Lord's Resistance Army
Lord’s Resistance Army
Neighbourly Love
Occupy Wall Street
Political Action
Public Theology
Religion
Religious Capital
Social Movements
Super-diverse Society
Superdiverse Context
Superdiverse Society
UK National Minimum Wage
Urban Communities
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138548848
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The rising importance of community organizing in the US and more recently in Britain has coincided with the developing significance of social movements and identity politics, debates about citizenship, social capital, civil society, and religion in the public sphere. At a time when participation in formal political process and membership of faith groups have both declined dramatically, community organizing has provided a new opportunity for small community groups, marginalized urban communities, and people of faith to engage in effective political action through the developments of inter-faith and cross-cultural coalitions of groups. In spite of its renewed popularity, little critical attention has been paid to community organizing.

This book places community organizing within debates about the role of religion in the public sphere and the rise of public theology in recent years. The book explores the history, methodology, and achievements of community organizing, engaging in a series of conversations with key community organizers in the US and Britain. This volume breaks new ground by beginning to articulate a cross-cultural and inter-faith ‘Theology for Community Organizing’ that arises from fresh readings of Liberation Theology.

Chris Shannahan is a Research Fellow in Urban Theology at the University of Birmingham and Director of the University’s Urban Religion Community Education Programme. He worked previously as an inner city Methodist Minister for sixteen years. He is actively involved in a range of community development projects in Birmingham. He has taught Urban and Practical Theology at the Queens Foundation for Ecumenical Theological Education, the University of Birmingham and Newman College University in Birmingham and spoken at conferences held by the Iona Community, the Progressive Christianity Network, the Institute for Urban Theology and the Association of American Geographers. He has recently launched a Metropolitan Religion Study group at the University of Birmingham aimed at graduates in the West Midlands and a community centred Urban Theology Forum. His first book, Voices from the Borderland (2010), provided a critical exploration of contemporary urban theologies and called for the development of a new interdisciplinary and cross-cultural pattern of urban theology that is more attuned to the complex and interrelated fluid urban world of the twenty-first century.

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