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Informationen zum Autor S. K. Moore is an ordained minister with the United Church of Canada who served as a chaplain in the Canadian Forces for twenty-two years. His operational tours include Bosnia, during the war (1993), Haiti (1997), and the Kandahar Provincial Reconstruction Team, Afghanistan for research purposes (2006). He is presently involved with conflict studies at Saint Paul University, Ottawa, Canada. Klappentext By way of theoretical analysis and documented case studies from a number of countries, this book considers Religious Leader Engagement as an emerging domain that advances the cause of reconciliation via the religious peacebuildingof chaplains—a construct that may be generalized to expeditionary, humanitarian, and domestic operational contexts. Inhaltsverzeichnis Part I. Theoretical Considerations of the Role of Religion in the Conflict EnvironmentChapter One: IntroductionChapter Two: Theory and PraxisChapter Three: The Role of Religion in Conflict and PeacebuildingChapter Four: Religious Leader Engagement-An Emerging Role for Operational ChaplainsPart II. Case Studies from the International Military Chaplaincy CommunityChapter Five: Canada in Bosnia and Afghanistan: An Interfaith Celebration for Peace in a Theater of War (1994)Whole of Government Partners: The Ulema Shura (2006-07)Chapter Six: France in Kosovo: Breaking Bread Together and Building Trust: An Apology (2005-06)Chapter Seven: The United States in Iraq: An Integrated Approach to Forging Inter-religious Alliances: The Baghdad Accords (2007-2008)Chapter Eight: New Zealand and Norway in Afghanistan: Additional Perspectives on Religious Leader Engagement: A Reconstruction Role (2009-10) and Specialist Considerations (2007)Chapter Nine: The Religious Directors of the Bosnia-Herzegovina Defense Forces: From Conflict to Collaboration-A Model of Reconciliation in ProcessPart III. Religious Leader Engagement in ApplicationChapter Ten: Religious Leader Engagement in ImplementationChapter Eleven: A Practical Theology of Reconciliation in Theaters of WarConclusions...