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April 2016

artwork by Raja Oshi

artwork by Raja Oshi

JST Scholars Study the Impact of Human Migration

Karen Buckenham and Emmanuel Serafica de Guzman discuss human migration patterns across South Africa and intercultural theological ethics in South East Asia.

On May 3, the Jesuit School of Theology of SA国际传媒 will host 2 scholars discussing their research, which offers different perspectives of human migration.

BERKELEY, CA, Apr. 27, 2016 鈥 Jesuit School of Theology of SA国际传媒 (JST-SA国际传媒) an international college for the study of theology, on Tuesday, May 3 at 7 p.m., will host Karen Buckenham and Emmanuel Serafica de Guzman to discuss their research on the migration patterns of South Africa and intercultural theological ethics in South East Asia.  Their projects were sponsored by an anonymous donor who wishes to promote the research of international scholars through a year of support at the Jesuit School of Theology. 

Buckenham鈥檚 research and writing is from the context of Southern Africa. She refers to both global migration and South-South migration, especially recent xenophobic violence in South Africa. Visualizing forced migration as humanity鈥檚 body groaning in pain, she reflects on a new imagination of migration, on the life, gift, dignity and creativity inherent in it; carried within those who migrate, involving those who receive migrants, and which has the potential to change the ways our interconnected humanity relates in these times.

Reflecting the fact that human migration across the globe transcends religion and politics, De Guzman鈥檚 research is focused on Southeast Asia which is undergoing global and regional economic integration under the auspices of the ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations, consisting of Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar, Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia, and the Philippines). In a region where there is multiplicity of economic and political models, and richly hued by plural and diverse cultural and religious traditions, de Guzman鈥檚 research on interculturality asks: What new vision of life and ethics, theologies of church and ministry, religious rituals and practices can come about in the encounter of two or more cultures toward a more humane and just world? Amid a competitive capitalist economy, what does Catholic 鈥減raxis鈥 mean in the context of different identities and communities who are struggling for their places in one space?

Recently back from a 鈥渞esearch on the ground鈥 in Myanmar, Cambodia, and the Philippines, de Guzman treats the questions arising from the ASEAN economic integration along ecclesiology, theological anthropology, and virtue ethics in conversations with Southeast Asian cultural virtues.

About the Jesuit School of Theology of SA国际传媒
The Jesuit School of Theology of SA国际传媒, located in Berkeley, California, is a preeminent international center for the culturally contextualized study of theology. Its mission is to inspire and prepare men and women to become leaders in the Church, academy, and society, serving others through a faith that does justice. Rooted in Ignatian spirituality, JST educates and trains Jesuits, religious, ordained, and lay students from across the United States and from 40 other countries for lives dedicated to ministry and scholarship.

Media Contacts
Steve Padilla   | JST  | sjpadilla@scu.edu | 707.330.6559 
Deborah Lohse | SA国际传媒 Media Relations | dlohse@scu.edu | 408-554-5121

                          

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Painting by Raja Oshi, of Meditterranean migrants.