During the summer of 2020, the Wendland-Cook program hosted a series of webinars under the theme: Liberating People and Planet: Christian Responses at the Intersection of Economics, Ecology, and Religion. Originally planned as an in-person conference, these webinars featured insights from theologians and scholars of religion reflecting on our climate and economic crisis.
A Dirtification of Economy from a Pacific Eco-Relational Perspective
A Dirtification of Economy from a Pacific Eco-Relational Perspective
During the summer of 2020, the Wendland-Cook program hosted a series of webinars under the theme: Liberating People and Planet: Christian Responses at the Intersection of Economics, Ecology, and Religion. Originally planned as an in-person conference, these webinars featured insights from theologians and scholars of religion reflecting on our climate and economic crisis.
A Dirtification of Economy from a Pacific Eco-Relational Perspective
During the summer of 2020, the Wendland-Cook program hosted a series of webinars under the theme: Liberating People and Planet: Christian Responses at the Intersection of Economics, Ecology, and Religion. Originally planned as an in-person conference, these webinars featured insights from theologians and scholars of religion reflecting on our climate and economic crisis.
A Dirtification of Economy from a Pacific Eco-Relational Perspective
During the summer of 2020, the Wendland-Cook program hosted a series of webinars under the theme: Liberating People and Planet: Christian Responses at the Intersection of Economics, Ecology, and Religion. Originally planned as an in-person conference, these webinars featured insights from theologians and scholars of religion reflecting on our climate and economic crisis.
A Dirtification of Economy from a Pacific Eco-Relational Perspective
During the summer of 2020, the Wendland-Cook program hosted a series of webinars under the theme: Liberating People and Planet: Christian Responses at the Intersection of Economics, Ecology, and Religion. Originally planned as an in-person conference, these webinars featured insights from theologians and scholars of religion reflecting on our climate and economic crisis.