Description
Kinship Across Borders presents a powerful analysis of the injustice of the current immigration system and an engaging alternative based on human solidarity and Christian commitment. It will inspire action that can make a difference. -- David Hollenbach, SJ, University Chair in Human Rights and International Justice, Boston College This extraordinary book convincingly demonstrates how and why what appear on the surface as fundamentally social or economic issues are profoundly theological, reflecting basic presuppositions about who God is and who we are. Heyer has thus provided us with the kind of scholarly yet accessible 'theology of immigration' so desperately needed in our debates on immigration policy. -- Roberto Goizueta, Margaret O'Brien Flatley Professor of Catholic Theology, Boston College This is a timely and creative work that re-frames the topic of immigration for US Christians and challenges us to a new ethic of responsible global citizenship, one that does more than lip-service to 'family values'. Impressive for its interdisciplinary scholarship, powerful stories, and clear argumentation, Kinship across Borders will prove useful for a wide readership, including politicians, pastoral workers, and students and professionals in the field of theological ethics. -- Anne Patrick, William H. Laird Professor of Religion and the Liberal Arts, emerita, Carleton College Thousands die on our borders and many within the church remain silent. But as Heyer demonstrates in her well thought-out book, Kinship across Borders, these dying strangers are kinfolk, not some dehumanized immigrant. Her important contribution to the immigration discourse provides us with a well-grounded theological and ethical analysis to what has become the greatest human rights violation presently occurring within US borders. -- Miguel A. De La Torre, Iliff School of Theology In an immigration debate dominated by economic and utilitarian approaches, Heyer's brilliant work opens up the ethical terrain and reminds us that what we need is not only more information but a new imagination. As she looks at the human costs of the migrant in light of the Christian tradition, she calls us to examine not only how people cross political borders but also how they might cross the walls and barriers that exists in the human heart. -- Daniel G. Groody, CSC, associate professor of theology, University of Notre Dame
About the Author
Kristin E. Heyer is Bernard J. Hanley Professor of Religious Studies at Santa Clara University. She is the author of Prophetic and Public: The Social Witness of US Catholicism, which won the College Theology Society's Best Book Award, and coeditor of Catholics and Politics: Dynamic Tensions between Faith and Power.
Reviews
Kinship Across Borders is a necessary text for university libraries that maintain collections in Theology, Politics, Law or Philosophy. It should be read by anyone interested in finding solutions to the immigration problems we all face today. Catholic Library World Enables new understandings of the human person threatened and renewed, and ... reveals threats to family and civic bonds while pointing to how those bonds may be strengthened -- Robert Heimburger Modern Theology
Awards
Winner of Catholic Social Teaching 6 (United States) and Catholic Social Teaching (United States) and CPA Book Award for Catholic Social Teaching 6 (United States) and Catholic Press Association Book Award for Catholic Social Teaching 6 (United States) and Catholic Press Association Book Award for Catholic Social Teaching and Constructive-Reflective Study of Religion (United States). Short-listed for Catholic Press Association Book Award for Social Teaching and Catholic Press Association Book Award for Social Teaching 6 (United States) and CPA Book Award for Social Teaching 6 (United States).
Book Information
ISBN 9781589019300
Author Kristin E. Heyer
Format Paperback
Page Count 208
Imprint Georgetown University Press
Publisher Georgetown University Press
Weight(grams) 340g