Thomas G. Weiss, the director of the Ralph Bunch Institute for International Studies at the City University of New York Graduate Center, explains how the international norm known as the “responsibility to protect” helped prevent humanitarian disaster in Libya, and how it might guide the international response to Syria.
Podcasts
America offers a number of podcasts. To learn more about each individual podcast series and subscribe for free, please visit http://americamagazine.org/podcasts
Young Jesuit Evangelists
How do you talk to young people about the Catholic faith in a way they can understand? For the editors of The Jesuit Post, the answer lies at the intersection of faith and popular culture. In this conversation, the Jesuit scholastics Patrick Gilger, Eric Sundrup, Jim Keane and Sam Sawyer explain the genesis of The […]
A Catholic Look at ‘Downton’
James Martin, S.J., and Tim Reidy discuss the hidden themes of grace, suffering, love and forgiveness in the PBS’ series “Downton Abbey.” And why the word “Abbey” is important.
Deconstructing Oscar V
For the fifth year in a row, Bill McGarvey of CathNewsUSA and James Martin, S.J., join Tim Reidy for a discussion of the Oscar contending films. Among their favorites, “The Tree of Life” and The Descendants,” two films with spiritual themes that treat them in very different ways.
A Mentor’s Legacy
In 1968, shortly after the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., John Brooks, S.J., of the College of the Holy Cross set out to recruit a group of African Americans to attend the small Catholic college in Worcester, Massachusetts. Among those he would bring to the school were Clarence Thomas and Theodore V. Wells, Jr. […]
Assessing the Council
In an archive interview from the 2010 Los Angeles Religious Education Congress, Richard Gaillardetz examines the successes and the still yet unrealized goals of the Second Vatican Council. Should Catholics today focus anew on implementing the Council’s vision, or instead turn outward to evangelize the culture? Or perhaps, fifty years after Vatican II, is a […]
Witnesses to Injustice
Timothy A. Byrnes talks about his new book Reverse Mission, which looks at three religious communities and the unique ways they have shaped U.S. foreign policy. Byrnes, a professor of political science at Colgate University and a panelist on the Ivory Tower Half Hour, focuses here on the story of the six Jesuits who were […]
The Continuing Mission
There’s been a change of leadership this month at Catholic Relief Services, the relief and development arm of the U.S. Catholic Church, but will that mean a change of direction? Kevin Clarke recently spoke with Catholic Relief Services new CEO Carolyn Woo. Ms. Woo comes to CRS after a lengthy tenure as dean of The […]
Children in Wartime
This week we spoke with Mary Meehan, a freelance writer and public speaker, who is sought after to give talks about life issues at universities and other locations across the country. Her recent article for America, “In Harm’s Way,” looks at the effects of war on children, both born and unborn. Mary spoke to us […]
Signs of the Spirit
Rev. Brendan Leahy, professor of theology at St. Patrick’s College in Maynooth, Ireland, talks about his new book, Ecclesial Movements and Communities, which traces the origins and significance of movements such as L’Arche, Focolare, Communion and Liberation and the Community of Sant’Egidio. Fr. Leahy discusses the unique charisms of these communities and the ways in […]
