Spring/Summer 2019 (Vol. 47, Nos. 1&2)
La Cara Lóbrega de la Globalización
Crecer como un “niño de la calle” en Juárez, México, fue como ser una rata de laboratorio en un experimento socioeconómico con terribles consecuencias, especialmente para los niños vulnerables. Por Pedro Morales
Fronteras
A pesar de que las fronteras de todo el mundo se militarizan más, los activistas, los residentes de larga data y los migrantes en las tierras fronterizas de los Estados Unidos y México participan en actos de resistencia. By Maura Fitzgerald
Borderline
Even as borders around the world become more militarized, activists, long-time residents, and migrants in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands engage in acts of resistance. By Maura Fitzgerald
A Muslim’s Search for Meaning
The author starts from his own narrative to explore what it means to be part of a community (ummah) that engages the Qur’an as a living text. By Zain Abdullah
Waking from a Dream
We honor Martin Luther King Jr. by applying his moral vision in the contemporary moment. By Jonathan L. Walton
Necropolis
Dark-skinned migrants and asylum seekers in an economically precarious Greece are subject to violent attacks and inhumane treatment. By Hans Lucht
What Ghana Taught King
Attending Ghana’s 1957 independence ceremony inspired and influenced Martin Luther King Jr. By Josslyn Jeanine Luckett
Diversity Troubles
Privileged members of academia need to go further to challenge the structures that support prejudice and domination. By Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza
Listen Children
Lucille Clifton believed in writing as a spiritual act to hone the self. By Major Jackson
The Spiritual Ground of History
Good historical research and writing needs to include a spiritual component. By Cameron McWhirter