BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//141.193.213.20//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.26.9// CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH X-FROM-URL:https://utsnyc.edu X-WR-TIMEZONE:America/New_York BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/New_York X-LIC-LOCATION:America/New_York BEGIN:STANDARD DTSTART:20231105T020000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0400 TZOFFSETTO:-0500 RDATE:20241103T020000 TZNAME:EST END:STANDARD BEGIN:DAYLIGHT DTSTART:20240310T020000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0500 TZOFFSETTO:-0400 RDATE:20250309T020000 TZNAME:EDT END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT UID:ai1ec-20590@utsnyc.edu DTSTAMP:20240329T082124Z CATEGORIES;LANGUAGE=en-US:Insight Project CONTACT:Christopher Fici\; cfici@iona.edu DESCRIPTION:Join us on Thursday\, April 8 at 6:00 pm EST for a lecture on i nner Animalities: Theology and the End of the Human with Dr. Eric Daryl Me yer. Professor Meyer is the Gregory Roeben and Susan Raunig Professor of Social Justice and the Human-Animal Relationship and an Assistant Professo r\, Theology Department at Carroll College. \nRegister Today! \nIn this ta lk\, Meyer’s will explore how attempts to distinguish human beings from al l other animals within the Christian theological tradition inevitably prod uce conflicted accounts of human life. Those conflicts at the heart of Chr istian self-conception\, the book ventures\, are also opportunities to thi nk differently\, see differently\, and live differently—through the end of the human.\nAbout Dr. Eric Daryl Meyer\nDr. Eric Daryl Meyer grew up in t he mountains of Colorado. As a theologian with strong interests in the lan d\, wild places\, and ecological degradation\, his research focuses on all the ways that the Christian theological tradition draws boundaries betwee n human beings and nonhuman animals. He earned a Ph.D. in Theology from Fo rdham University in 2014 and taught at Fordham and Loyola Marymount Univer sity (Los Angeles) before coming to Carroll. Read more.\n \nTickets: https ://myunion.utsnyc.edu/2020-2021/inner-animalities. DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210408T180000 DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210408T190000 LOCATION:Zoom Webinar SEQUENCE:0 SUMMARY:Inner Animalities: Theology and the End of the Human URL:https://utsnyc.edu/event/meyer/ X-COST-TYPE:external X-WP-IMAGES-URL:thumbnail\;https://utsnyc.edu/wp-content/uploads/Meyer-Carr oll-Photo-150x150.jpg\;150\;150\;1\,medium\;https://utsnyc.edu/wp-content/ uploads/Meyer-Carroll-Photo.jpg\;384\;480\; X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:\\n\\n
\\nJoin u
s on Thursday\, April 8 at 6:00 pm EST for a lecture on i
nner Animalities: Theology and the End of the Human with Dr.
In this talk\, Meyer’s will explore how attempts to distinguish human beings from all other animals within the Christian theological tradi tion inevitably produce conflicted accounts of human life. Those conflicts at the heart of Christian self-conception\, the book ventures\, are also opportunities to think differently\, see differently\, and live differentl y—through the end of the human.
\nDr. Eric Daryl Meyer grew up in the mountains of Colorado. As a theologian with strong interests in the land\, wild places\, and ecological degradation\, his research focuses on all th e ways that the Christian theological tradition draws boundaries between h uman beings and nonhuman animals. He earned a Ph.D. in Theology from Fordh am University in 2014 and taught at Fordham and Loyola Marymount Universit y (Los Angeles) before coming to Carroll. Read more.
\n\n
Tickets: https://myunion.utsnyc.edu/2020-2021 /inner-animalities.
X-TICKETS-URL:https://myunion.utsnyc.edu/2020-2021/inner-animalities END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT UID:ai1ec-20595@utsnyc.edu DTSTAMP:20240329T082124Z CATEGORIES;LANGUAGE=en-US:Insight Project CONTACT:John J. Thatamanil\; johnthatamanil@gmail.com DESCRIPTION:Join us on Thursday\, April 15 at 6:00 pm EST for a lecture on Wild Spirituality: Queer Grief and Grievance in an Age of Extinctions with Jacob J. Erickson. Professor Erickson is the Assistant Professor of Theol ogical Ethics\, Trinity College Dublin. \nRegister today\nLiving in what i s now called the Sixth Extinction\, creaturely deaths and disappearances e xceed knowing and feeling. Widely implicated in these losses is Christian theology\, with heterosexist and settler-colonial histories of being huma n\, of being created in the image of God. In this talk\, Erickson will ex plore recent queer ecologies that wrestle with the concept of the “wild\,” asking how queer perspectives on wild animality might offer deeply felt w ays of grief and grievance\, playful mourning and protest\, for these loss es. In short\, what might a “wild ecospirituality” look like in a time of mass extinction?\nAbout Jacob J. Erickson\nJacob J. Erickson has lectured in theological ethics at Trinity since 2016. He previously taught Religio n and Environmental Studies at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\ , USA. Alongside theologian Marion Grau (Norwegian School of Theology)\, h e chairs the Sacred Texts\, Theory\, and Theological Construction Unit and serves on the Steering Committee for the Martin Luther and Global Luthera n Traditions Unit for the American Academy of Religion.\nTickets: https:// myunion.utsnyc.edu/wild-spirituality. DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210415T180000 DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210415T190000 LOCATION:Zoom Webinar SEQUENCE:0 SUMMARY:Wild Spirituality: Queer Grief and Grievance in an Age of Extinctio ns URL:https://utsnyc.edu/event/erickson/ X-COST-TYPE:external X-WP-IMAGES-URL:thumbnail\;https://utsnyc.edu/wp-content/uploads/Erickson-1 50x150.png\;150\;150\;1\,medium\;https://utsnyc.edu/wp-content/uploads/Eri ckson.png\;1202\;1638\; X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:\\n\\n\\nJoin us on
Livi
ng in what is now called the Sixth Extinction\, creaturely deaths and disa
ppearances exceed knowing and feeling. Widely implicated in these losses
is Christian theology\, with heterosexist and settler-colonial histories o
f being human\, of being created in the image of God. In this talk\,
Jacob J. Erickson has lectured in theological ethics at Trin ity since 2016. He previously taught Religion and Environmental Studies at St. Olaf College in Northfield\, Minnesota\, USA. Alongside theologian Ma rion Grau (Norwegian School of Theology)\, he chairs the Sacred Texts\, Th eory\, and Theological Construction Unit and serves on the Steering Commit tee for the Martin Luther and Global Lutheran Traditions Unit for the Amer ican Academy of Religion.
\nTickets: https://myunion. utsnyc.edu/wild-spirituality.
X-TICKETS-URL:https://myunion.utsnyc.edu/wild-spirituality END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT UID:ai1ec-20758@utsnyc.edu DTSTAMP:20240329T082124Z CATEGORIES;LANGUAGE=en-US:Insight Project CONTACT:Ian Rees\; irees@uts.columbia.edu DESCRIPTION:Join us on Thursday\, May 6 at 6:00 pm EST for a lecture on The Challenge of Christian Animal Ethics with David L. Clough. Professor Clou gh is the Professor of Theological Ethics at The University of Chester. Re gistration is required to receive the Zoom details. \nRegister Today\nIn t his lecture\, David Clough makes the case that Christians have strong fait h-based reasons for urgent changes in their practice towards animals\, par ticularly with respect to the ways they are now raised for food. He begins by arguing that despite the many important pressing questions of social j ustice and environmental responsibility\, animal ethics is worth our time both because it is urgent and because it intersects with these other areas of ethical concern. He next provides an outline of where animals figure i n Christian understandings of God’s work in creation\, reconciliation\, an d redemption\, showing that Christians have faith-based reasons for being concerned for the flourishing of fellow animal creatures. In the third sec tion of the lecture\, he provides a survey of how animals are currently be ing raised for food\, which leads to the conclusion that there is a scanda lous abyss between a Christian understanding of animals and our current pr actice in using them for food. In the final part of the lecture\, he ident ifies two clear practical responses to the challenge: to reduce overall co nsumption of animal products and move to higher welfare sourcing. He invit es individuals\, churches\, and other Christian organizations to take acti on in relation to both goals\, and offers resources to guide and support s uch action.\nAbout David L. Clough\n\nPreviously\, I have worked on Karl B arth’s ethics and Christian pacifism\; currently\, my central concern is t he place of animals in Christian theology and ethics. I recently completed the landmark two-volume monograph On Animals (Volume I Systematic Theolog y 2012\; Volume II Theological Ethics\, 2019)\, and am currently Principa l Investigator on a three-year AHRC-funded project on the Christian Ethics of Farmed Animal Welfare with 13 partners including major UK churches.\nA fter completing doctoral studies at Yale University\, I moved to Durham as F.D. Maurice Postdoctoral Fellow in Christian Ethics at St Chad’s College \, Durham\, and then taught systematic theology and ethics at St. John’s C ollege. I served as President of the Society for the Study of Christian Et hics from 2014–18\, founded and convened the Theological Ethics seminar at the Society for the Study of Theology from 2001–2019\, Co-Chair the Anima ls and Religion Group of the American Academy of Religion\, and am Visitin g Professor at the Centre for Animal Welfare\, University of Winchester.\n In 2015\, I launched the CreatureKind project\, which draws on my research to engage churches in the UK and North America with farmed animal welfare as a faith issue. In 2018 I launched the DefaultVeg project encouraging o rganizations to make a simple change to events catering policy that benefi ts humans\, animals\, and the planet. I am a Methodist Local Preacher and have served on national ecumenical working groups on the ethics of modern warfare and the theology of climate change.\nTickets: https://myunion.utsn yc.edu/christian-animal-ethics. DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210506T180000 DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210506T190000 LOCATION:Zoom Webinar SEQUENCE:0 SUMMARY:The Challenge of Christian Animal Ethics URL:https://utsnyc.edu/event/clough/ X-COST-TYPE:external X-WP-IMAGES-URL:thumbnail\;https://utsnyc.edu/wp-content/uploads/David-outs ide-Hollybank-door-1410-square-150x150.jpg\;150\;150\;1\,medium\;https://u tsnyc.edu/wp-content/uploads/David-outside-Hollybank-door-1410-square.jpg\ ;609\;612\; X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:\\n\\n\\nJoin us on Thursday\, May 6 at 6:00 pm EST for a lecture on The Challenge of Christian Animal Ethics with David L. Clough. Professor Clough is the Professor of Theological Ethics at The Uni versity of Chester. Registration is required to receive the Zoom details. p>\n
\nIn this lecture\, David Clough makes the case that Christians have strong faith-based reasons for urgent changes in their practice towards animals\, particularly with respect to the ways they are now raised for food. He be gins by arguing that despite the many important pressing questions of soci al justice and environmental responsibility\, animal ethics is worth our t ime both because it is urgent and because it intersects with these other a reas of ethical concern. He next provides an outline of where animals figu re in Christian understandings of God’s work in creation\, reconciliation\ , and redemption\, showing that Christians have faith-based reasons for be ing concerned for the flourishing of fellow animal creatures. In the third section of the lecture\, he provides a survey of how animals are currentl y being raised for food\, which leads to the conclusion that there is a sc andalous abyss between a Christian understanding of animals and our curren t practice in using them for food. In the final part of the lecture\, he i dentifies two clear practical responses to the challenge: to reduce overal l consumption of animal products and move to higher welfare sourcing. He i nvites individuals\, churches\, and other Christian organizations to take action in relation to both goals\, and offers resources to guide and suppo rt such action.
\nPreviously\, I have worked on Karl Barth’s ethics and Christian pacifism\; currently\, my central concern is the place of animal s in Christian theology and ethics. I recently completed the landmark two- volume monograph On Animals (Volume I Systematic Theology 20 12\; Vol ume II Theological Ethics\, 2019)\, and am currentl y Principal Investigator on a three-year AHRC-funded project on the Christian Ethics of Farmed Animal Welf are with 13 partners including major UK churches.
\nAfter comple ting doctoral studies at Yale University\, I moved to Durham as F.D. Mauri ce Postdoctoral Fellow in Christian Ethics at St Chad’s College\, Durham\, and then taught systematic theology and ethics at St. John’s College. I s erved as President of the Society for t he Study of Christian Ethics from 2014–18\, founded and convened the T heological Ethics seminar at the Society for the Study of Theology from 2001–2019 \, Co-Chair the Animals and Religion Group of the American Academy of Religion \, and am Visiting Professor at the Centre fo r Animal Welfare\, University of Winchester.
\nIn 2015\, I launc hed the CreatureKind project \, which draws on my research to engage churches in the UK and North Ameri ca with farmed animal welfare as a faith issue. In 2018 I launched the DefaultVeg project encouraging organizat ions to make a simple change to events catering policy that benefits human s\, animals\, and the planet. I am a Methodist Local Preacher and have ser ved on national ecumenical working groups on the ethics of modern warfare and the theology of climate change.
\nTickets: https://myunion.utsnyc.edu/christian-animal-ethics.
X-TICKETS-URL:https://myunion.utsnyc.edu/christian-animal-ethics END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT UID:ai1ec-25033@utsnyc.edu DTSTAMP:20240329T082124Z CATEGORIES;LANGUAGE=en-US:Insight Project CONTACT:John Thatamanil\; jthatamanil@uts.columbia.edu DESCRIPTION:On Tuesday\, March 28 from 6:00-7:30pm ET\, Join Professor of T heology and World Religions at Union Theological Seminary the Rev. Dr. Joh n Thatamanil and Tim Lilburn for a virtual conversation entitled “Faith\, Contemplation and the Land.”\nA growing realization is emerging in a varie ty of fields that human beings have become profoundly inattentive to and d isconnected from place and the land. The consequences for human and natura l life are profound. What might be some of the causes of this separation\, and what are the upshots? On the other hand\, there has been considerable resurgence of attention to contemplation. Only this resurgence has had li ttle impact on the former problem. What might contemplation and place/the land have to do with each other? What might Evagrius say about this questi on? How might contemplative life reconnect us once more to place and the l and? Join the distinguished Canadian Poet and Essayist for a conversation on these vital themes for an age of ecological peril.\nRegister here\nTim Lilburn lives in the Bowker Creek watershed in W̱SÁNEĆterritory on Vancouv er Island. He is the author of twelve books of poetry\, including Harmoni a Mundi\, The House of Charlemagne\, Assiniboia\, Orphic Politics\, Kill-s ite\, and To the River. His work has received the Governor General’s Award \, The Canadian Authors’ Association Award\, the European Medal of Poetry and Art (the Homer Prize) and the Saskatchewan Book of the Year Award\, am ong other prizes. His poetry has been translated widely. Lilburn is also t he author of three essay collections\, Living in the World as if It Were H ome\, Going Home and The Larger Conversation: Contemplation and Place\, an d editor of two other influential books on poetics. A new essay collection \, Numinous Seditions: Interiority and Climate Change\, will appear from t he University of Alberta Press in September\, 2023. He has taught at the U niversity of Victoria\, the University of Saskatchewan and Middlebury Coll ege and worked with the dance troupe New Dance Horizons as a writer and pe rformer.\nTickets: https://host.nxt.blackbaud.com/registration-form/?formI d=18e9c67e-da9a-4b00-b6a8-3c8065c058c3&envId=p-srWBW36ys0aZ4CkIRtKH6Q. DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230328T180000 DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230328T193000 LOCATION:Zoom SEQUENCE:0 SUMMARY:Faith\, Contemplation and the Land URL:https://utsnyc.edu/event/faith-contemplation-and-the-land/ X-COST-TYPE:external X-WP-IMAGES-URL:thumbnail\;https://utsnyc.edu/wp-content/uploads/Tim-Lilbur n-150x150.png\;150\;150\;1\,medium\;https://utsnyc.edu/wp-content/uploads/ Tim-Lilburn.png\;321\;450\; X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:\\n\\n\\nOn Tuesday\, March 28 from 6:00-7:30pm ET\, Join Professor of Theol ogy and World Religions at Union Theological Seminary the Rev. Dr. John Thatamanil and T im Lilburn for a virtual conversation entitled “Faith\, Contemplation and the Land.”
\nA growing realization is emerging in a variety of field s that human beings have become profoundly inattentive to and disconnected from place and the land. The consequences for human and natural life are profound. What might be some of the causes of this separation\, and what a re the upshots? On the other hand\, there has been considerable resurgence of attention to contemplation. Only this resurgence has had little impact on the former problem. What might contemplation and place/the land have t o do with each other? What might Evagrius say about this question? How mig ht contemplative life reconnect us once more to place and the land? Join t he distinguished Canadian Poet and Essayist for a conversation on these vi tal themes for an age of ecological peril.
\n\nTim Lilburn li
ves in the Bowker Creek watershed in W̱SÁNEĆ
On Tue sday\, April 4 from 6:00-7:30pm ET\, Join Professor of Theology a nd World Religions at Union Theological Seminary the Rev. Dr. John Thatamanil and Associ ate Professor of Systematic Theology and Africana Studies at Yale Universi ty Divinity School the Rev. Dr. Willie Jennings for a virtual conversation entitled “Why the Body is the Land and the Land is the Body: Thoughts and Conversation.”
\nWhile much has been made of the intimate connectio n between inattention to place and the ecological crisis\, very little att ention has been given to the troublingly intimate relation between racial reasoning and the denial and destruction of place centered identity. Dr. W illie James Jennings has been a pioneer in thinking through this neglected topic. Join Dr. Jennings in conversation with John J. Thatamanil\, Direct or of Union’s Insight Project\, as they take up this urgent topic.
\n\nDr. Wil lie James Jennings is currently Associate Professor of Systematic Theology and Africana Studies at Yale University Divinity School.
\nDr. Jenn ings was born and raised in Grand Rapids\, Michigan. Dr. Jennings received his B.A. in Religion and Theological Studies from Calvin College (1984)\, his M.Div. (Master of Divinity degree) from Fuller Theological Seminary i n Pasadena California\, and his Ph.D. degree from Duke University. Dr. Jen nings who is a systematic theologian teaches in the areas of theology\, bl ack church and Africana studies\, as well as post-colonial and race theory . Dr. Jennings is the author of The Christian Imagination: Theology an d the Origins of Race published by Yale University Press. It is one o f the most important books in theology written in the last 25 years and is now a standard text read in colleges\, seminaries\, and universities. Dr. Jennings is also the recipient of the 2015 Grawemeyer Award in Religion f or his groundbreaking work on race and Christianity. Dr. Jennings recently authored commentary on the Book of Acts won the Reference Book of the Yea r Award\, from The Academy of Parish Clergy. He is also the author of After Whiteness: An Education in Belonging\, which is the inaugural b ook in the much anticipated book series\, Theological Education between th e Times\, and has already become an instant classic\, winning the 2020 boo k of the year award from Publisher’s Weekly\, and being selected as a fina list for the 2021 American Academy of Religion Book of the Year in the Con structive- Reflective Studies category. And now Dr. Jennings is hard at wo rk on a book on the doctrine of creation\, tentatively entitled\, “Reframi ng the World.”
\nIn addition to being a frequent lecturer at college s\, universities\, and seminaries\, Dr. Jennings is also a regular worksho p leader at pastor conferences. He is also a consultant for the Wabash Cen ter for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion\, and for the Assoc iation of Theological Schools.
\nHe served along with his wife\, the Reverend Joanne L. Browne Jennings as associate ministers at the Mount Le vel Baptist Church in Durham\, North Carolina\, and for many years\, they served together as interim pastors for several Presbyterian and Baptist ch urches in North Carolina. They are the parents of two wonderful daughters\ , Njeri and Safiya Jennings.
\n X-TICKETS-URL:https://host.nxt.blackbaud.com/registration-form/?formId=751b 2055-21a6-47fe-8893-0ec6f5eb7323&envId=p-srWBW36ys0aZ4CkIRtKH6Q END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT UID:ai1ec-25035@utsnyc.edu DTSTAMP:20240329T082125Z CATEGORIES;LANGUAGE=en-US:Insight Project CONTACT:John Thatamanil\; jthatamanil@uts.columbia.edu DESCRIPTION:On Wednesday April 19 from 7:30-9:00pm ET\, Join Professor of T heology and World Religions at Union Theological Seminary the Rev. Dr. Joh n Thatamanil and Christiana Zenner for an in-person conversation entitled “Swipe Left? The Anthropocene in Anti-Colonial Feminist Perspective”.\nFro m the New York Times to the Economist and the Journal of Quaternary Strati graphy\, the “Anthropocene” has been proposed as the current geological ep och\, in which humans are named as a decisive planetary force. Geology\, t his lecture argues\, has quite a bit to do with theology. Unfortunately\, in most iterations the deployment of the “Anthropocene” idea and its proxy of “climate crisis” does little to name the racialized\, political econom ic\, and theological imaginaries and colonial histories that have generate d the massive eco-social degradations that are said to characterize this e poch. This talk both deconstructs the conceits of scientific modernity (ge ology\, in particular) and its colonial knowledge-making apparatus\, while pointing an anti-colonial\, anti-racist way forward.\nRegister Here\nChri stiana Zenner\, Ph.D.\, is Associate Professor of Theology\, Science\, and Ethics and affiliated faculty in Environmental Studies at Fordham Univers ity-Lincoln Center. An anti-colonial feminist and scholar of modernity’s c onceits in ecological science and religious ethics\, Dr. Zenner is the aut hor of the book\, Just Water: Theology\, Ethics\, and Global Fresh Water C rises (2014\, rev. ed. 2018). She is an expert on the Catholic Church’s tu rn to ecological justice\; co-editor of two scholarly books on bioethics a nd sustainability\; and the author of more than a dozen peer-reviewed arti cles on fresh water values\, climate justice\, and religious ethics. A pro minent interpreter of Laudato Si’ (2015) for scholarly and public audience s\, she has been published or quoted in the Washington Post\, the New York Times\, The New Republic\, and more.\nTickets: https://host.nxt.blackbaud .com/registration-form/?formId=86ea50aa-1ed7-4e58-8421-72749cc05394&envId= p-srWBW36ys0aZ4CkIRtKH6Q. DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20230419T193000 DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20230419T210000 GEO:+40.811238;-73.9619 LOCATION:Union Theological Seminary @ 3041 Broadway\, New York\, NY 10027\, USA SEQUENCE:0 SUMMARY:Swipe Left? The Anthropocene in Anti-Colonial Feminist Perspective URL:https://utsnyc.edu/event/swipe-left-the-anthropocene-in-anti-colonial-f eminist-perspective/ X-COST-TYPE:external X-WP-IMAGES-URL:thumbnail\;https://utsnyc.edu/wp-content/uploads/CZ-headsho t-150x150.jpg\;150\;150\;1\,medium\;https://utsnyc.edu/wp-content/uploads/ CZ-headshot.jpg\;720\;1080\; X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:\\n\\n\\nOn Wednesday April 19 from 7:30-9:00pm ET\, Join Professo r of Theology and World Religions at Union Theological Seminary the Rev. Dr. John Thatamanil and Christiana Zenner for an in-person conversation entitled “Swipe L eft? The Anthropocene in Anti-Colonial Feminist Perspective”.
\nFrom the New York Times to the Economist and the Journal of Q uaternary Stratigraphy\, the “Anthropocene” has been proposed as the c urrent geological epoch\, in which humans are named as a decisive planetar y force. Geology\, this lecture argues\, has quite a bit to do with theolo gy. Unfortunately\, in most iterations the deployment of the “Anthropocene ” idea and its proxy of “climate crisis” does little to name the racialize d\, political economic\, and theological imaginaries and colonial historie s that have generated the massive eco-social degradations that are said to characterize this epoch. This talk both deconstructs the conceits of scie ntific modernity (geology\, in particular) and its colonial knowledge-maki ng apparatus\, while pointing an anti-colonial\, anti-racist way forward.< /p>\n
\nChristiana Zenner\, Ph.D.\, is Associate Professor of Theology\, Sc ience\, and Ethics and affiliated faculty in Environmental Studies at Ford ham University-Lincoln Center. An anti-colonial feminist and scholar of mo dernity’s conceits in ecological science and religious ethics\, Dr. Zenner is the author of the book\, Just Water: Theology\, Ethics\, and Global Fresh Water Crises (2014\, rev. ed. 2018) . She is an expert on the Catholic Church’s turn to ecological just ice\; co-editor of two scholarly books on bioethics and sustainability\; a nd the author of more than a dozen peer-reviewed articles on fresh water v alues\, climate justice\, and religious ethics. A prominent interpreter of Laudato Si’ (2015) for scholarly and public audiences\, she has be en published or quoted in the Washington Post\, the New York Tim es\, The New Republic\, and more.
\n X-TICKETS-URL:https://host.nxt.blackbaud.com/registration-form/?formId=86ea 50aa-1ed7-4e58-8421-72749cc05394&envId=p-srWBW36ys0aZ4CkIRtKH6Q END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR