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Home  >  Fellows & Scholars  >  Michael Cromartie  > 
Books By Michael Cromartie
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Religion and Politics in America
A Conversation
Posted: Monday, May 2, 2005
The current national discourse has brought faith and its relationship to public policy to the forefront of our daily news. Since 1999, the Ethics and Public Center, through the generosity of the Pew Charitable Trusts, has hosted six conferences for national journalists to help raise the level of their reporting by increasing their understanding of religion, religious communities, and the religious convictions that inform the political activity of devout believers. This book contains the presentations and conversations that grew out of those conferences.  [Full Story]
Religion, Culture, and International Conflict
A Conversation
Posted: Monday, May 2, 2005
The current national discourse has brought faith and its relationship to public policy to the forefront of our daily news. Since 1999, the Ethics and Public Policy Center, through the generosity of the Pew Charitable Trusts, has hosted six conferences for national journalists to help raise the level of their reporting by increasing their understanding of religion, religious communities, and the religious convictions that inform the political activity of devout believers. This book contains the presentations and conversations that grew out of those conferences.  [Full Story]
A Public Faith
Evangelicals and Civic Engagement
Posted: Wednesday, July 16, 2003
The essays in this volume look at the role of evangelicals in American civic life. The contributors examine evangelical Christians' beliefs and activities on topics ranging from bioethics to race relations and welfare reform to international human rights. Taken together, the essays show that the social commitment of evangelicals extends considerably beyond family-related issues, and that their activity in the public sphere makes an essential contribution to the public good.  [Full Story]
A Preserving Grace
Protestants, Catholics, and Natural Law
Posted: Monday, January 27, 1997
A host of questions that surround the notion of natural law are examined and debated by a distinguished group of scholars--Russell Hittinger, Susan Schreiner, Daniel Westberg, Joan Lockwood O'Donovan, Carl E. Braaten, Timothy George, William Edgar, and Robert P. George.   [Full Story]
Caesar's Coin Revisited
Christians and the Limits of Government
Posted: Sunday, April 7, 1996
"Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's," said Jesus, "and to God the things that are God's." What does this mean in a time and place drastically different from first-century Palestine? As more and more Christians from differing traditions exercise power in the political arena, what theological principles should shape their views of the role of government? Protestant and Catholic scholars of diverse views debate these questions in Caesar's Coin Revisited.   [Full Story]
Creation at Risk?
Religion, Science, and Environmentalism
Posted: Sunday, October 1, 1995
The environmental movement both echoes and challenges traditional Judeo-Christian views about humankind's proper relationship to the natural world. Ten scholars and activists here explore--and clash over--some of the scientific, religious, moral, philosophical, economic, and political claims advanced by contemporary environmentalists.  [Full Story]
The 9 Lives of Population Control
Posted: Monday, August 21, 1995
Does our world now have more people than it can reasonably sustain? If current growth rates continue, will overpopulation be the cause of ever-increasing hunger, poverty, and environmental degradation? Will we run out of resources? And if the world is becoming overpopulated, what is the most wise, humane, and effective response by concerned governments and organizations? These are some of the questions that engaged twenty-six scholars and practitioners at a conference sponsored by the Ethics and Public Policy Center in October 1993. The four papers and two related responses from that conference form the nucleus of this book.   [Full Story]
Disciples and Democracy
Religious Conservatives and the Future of American Politics
Posted: Sunday, January 1, 1995
The religious right, currently the subject of intense press attention, is here scrutinized by both insiders and outside observers. Journalists Fred Barnes (The New Republic), Michael Barone (U.S. News & World Report), and E. J. Dionne (The Washington Post), activists Ralph Reed (Christian Coalition) and Michael Farris, and scholarly analysts John Green, Allen Hertzke, Michael Horowitz, Richard Land, and George Weigel examine the agenda of religious conservatives, their influence upon the 1992 election, and whether and how they can increase their political influence in the next four years. In a foreword, Irving Kristol calls religious conservatives "the very core of an emerging American conservatism." The volume, published jointly by the Ethics and Public Policy Center and Eerdmans, includes brief comments by eighteen other informed observers as well.   [Full Story]
Might and Right After the Cold War
Can Foreign Policy Be Moral?
Posted: Thursday, April 1, 1993
“The discussion of ethics or morality in our relations with other states is a prolific cause of confusion,” former Secretary of State Dean Acheson once asserted. The distinguished contributors to this volume—Alberto R. Coll, James Finn, Richard D. Land, Luis E. Lugo, George Weigel, and Nicholas Wolterstorff—do not deny such confusion. But they argue that moral issues are simply unavoidable in the making of foreign-policy choices. The often-heated “morality and foreign policy” debate can best illuminate the quandaries faced by policy-makers through a recovery of the classic tradition of “prudence.” This tradition encourages statecraft that is, in Coll’s words, neither “politically impractical nor morally bankrupt.”  [Full Story]
No Longer Exiles
The Religious Right in American Politics
Posted: Saturday, December 26, 1992
In this provocative collection nine distinguished observers give their assessments of what the Religious New Right has achieved and what its potential is for the rest of this decade. Historian George Marsden of Notre Dame, sociologist Robert Wuthnow of Princeton, and political scientists Robert Booth Fowler of the University of Wisconsin and Corwin Smidt of Calvin College ponder its past and future from their varying perspectives. Five other scholars—James L. Guth, Carl F. H. Henry, James Davison Hunter, Grant Wacker, and George Weigel—offer challenging responses, and nine prominent activists and experts add insightful comments.  [Full Story]
Total Records: 11
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Research Areas
Christianity and Politics
Evangelical Church in America
Media Coverage of Religion
Religious Freedom
Religious Right
Research Programs
Religion and the Media
Evangelicals in Civic Life
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A Public Faith
A Public Faith
Evangelicals and Civic Engagement
The essays in this volume look at the role of evangelicals in American civic life. The contributors examine evangelical Christians' beliefs and activities on topics ranging from bioethics to race  [Read More]
Contact Information
Michael Cromartie
1015 15th St N.W., Suite 900
Washington, DC  20005
Tel. 202-682-1200
Fax. 202-408-0632
crom@eppc.org