Interfaith Voices Podcast (hour-long version)
Summary: Interfaith Voices is the nation’s leading religion news magazine on public radio. We offer weekly analyses of the big headlines alongside lesser-told stories – those of African-American Mormons and atheists in the military, evangelical environmentalists and Muslim feminists. Through these stories, a rough sketch of our country’s religious landscape begins to emerge. It’s a marketplace of beliefs and ideas too complex for sound bites, and too important to ignore. That’s why Interfaith Voices matters.
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- Artist: Interfaith Voices
- Copyright: Copyright 2020
Podcasts:
Host Amber Khan ruminates on unplugging from the news cycle - and whether that means abdicating a responsibility to pay attention.
Speculation abounds over what a new Supreme Court justice will mean for Roe v. Wade — and whether religious liberty arguments could affirm or overturn it.
Florida State law professor Mary Ziegler explains the long and complicated legal history between reproductive rights, religious liberty and freedom of speech.
Is the recent Supreme Court ruling a win for religious liberty or a loss for women's autonomy?
We explore Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanagh's record as a judge as well as how he's informed by his faith.
Speculation abounds over what a new Supreme Court justice will mean for Roe v. Wade — and whether religious liberty arguments could affirm or overturn it.
Florida State law professor Mary Ziegler explains the long and complicated legal history between reproductive rights, religious liberty and freedom of speech.
Is the recent Supreme Court ruling a win for religious liberty or a loss for women's autonomy?
We explore Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanagh's record as a judge as well as how he's informed by his faith.
People of faith are not just speaking up in the #MeToo era, but actually combating abuse and seeking accountability within their spiritual communities.
Serene Jones, president of Union Theological Seminary, says sexual and domestic abuse has long been an institutional problem for churches. So how do we root out that behavior in our religious communities?
Experts working with faith communities in crisis say holding an abuser accountable, both to validate the experience of the victim and to prevent further abuse, is an essential part of the healing process.
Religious institutions aren't alone in applying the lessons from #MeToo into their ministry; so, too, are academic researchers in the study of religion.
Allegations of abuse and #MeToo experiences have impacted communities in many faiths, including the Pagan, Buddhist and Christian traditions.
People of faith are not just speaking up in the #MeToo era, but actually combating abuse and seeking accountability within their spiritual communities.