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Emory Center For Interdisciplinary Study of Religion Launches Two-Year Project On Sex, Marriage and Family Joining John Witte Jr., director of CISR, to lead the project is Don S. Browning, Campbell Professor of Ethics and the Social Sciences at the University of Chicago. Browning, who has been named the Woodruff Visiting Professor of Interdisciplinary Religious Studies here, is heading a team of 14 Emory and two visiting scholars, who are focusing on marriage, sex and family issues as they relate to "religions of the book," namely Christianity, Judaism and Islam. The projects first phase this fall features an intensive seminar among the scholars, or fellowswho represent a variety of academic disciplines and expertiseas they examine not only conventional issues of marriage and divorce, child custody, sexual identity and intergenerational relations, but also controversial topics such as abortion, euthanasia, natural bases of sexuality, cloning, kinship and more. Out of these discussions will come a series of public forums, new papers and books, public lectures, workshops and individual research projects throughout 2002. The final phase will be an international conference in spring 2003, featuring research projects of the participants, along with three dozen additional speakers. Browning, who most recently headed a decade-long project at Chicago on religion, culture and family, sees the Emory effort as breaking new ground in understanding how religion impacts family life. "Theres not a lot of debate on these issues in which religion or theology is well-represented," says Browning. "I feel theres a strong relationship between what happens to families and what happens to religion. If families go down, then religion will, too." Witte, who also is director of Emorys well-known Law and Religion Program, says that some 300 faculty across campus have a stated scholarly interest in religion, and only one-third of that number are professional religion and theology faculty. "There is widespread recognition here that religion is a central feature of life and that it suffuses all of society," says Witte. "There are three things for which people will die: their faith, their family and their freedom. This project studies all three." Browning, the author, co-author or editor of several publications growing out of the Chicago project, including, "From Culture Wars to Common Ground: Religion and the American Family Debate," will collaborate with Witte on compiling an even broader look at religion and family. The two plan to compile a set of primary sources on family issues that goes beyond Christianity, Judaism and Islam to include Hinduism, Buddhism and other non-Western traditions represented in the United States. They will then edit a companion volume of interpretive essays contributed by project fellows and others. Among the other collaborative research projects by CISR fellows during
the two-year cycle are: The center, which was established in fall 2000, is supported with funds from Emory and a five-year, $3.2 million grant from The Pew Charitable Trusts. It is housed at Emory Law School and administered by the Law and Religion Program. The Pew Charitable Trusts have made four major grants to Emorys Law and Religion Program over the past decade to fund multi-year research and publication projects on "Christianity and Democracy in Global Context" (1989-92), "Religious Human Rights in the World Today" (1992-96), "The Problem and Promise of Proselytism in the New World Order" (1996-99), and "Religious Liberty in Russia" (1997-2000). Emory is one of seven "Centers of Excellence" established by Pew to study the intersection between religion and the humanities and social sciences including international relations, urban affairs, and American democracy. So far, centers have been established at Boston University, Notre Dame, Princeton University, the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Virginia and Yale University. The Pew Charitable Trusts (www.pewtrusts.com) support nonprofit activities in the areas of culture, education, the environment, health and human services, public policy and religion. Based in Philadelphia, Pew makes strategic investments to help organizations and citizens develop practical solutions to difficult problems. In 2000, with approximately $4.8 billion in assets, Pew committed over $235 million to 302 nonprofit organizations. Return to Law and Politics Releases Return to Religion Releases |
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