Session 1
March 3, 2025
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 2
March 10, 2025
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 3
March 17, 2025
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 4
March 24, 2025
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 5
March 31, 2025
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 6
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 7
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 8
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 9
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 10
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 11
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 12
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 13
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 14
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 15
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 16
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 17
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 18
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 19
6.30pm-8.00pm
Session 20
6.30pm-8.00pm

Online Course Details    

This module introduces students to Liberation Theology: adiverse tradition of thought that explores what it means for Christ to bringliberation from sin as manifest in the injustices of the world. Students willreflect on how liberation theologians have responded to a range of key issuesfacing our society, and ask where and how Christ is present in the liberationstruggles of today.  

Week 1
What is Liberation Theology?

This week will introduce students to liberation theology as a field of study, reflecting on some key ideas that inform the work of liberation theologians throughout the world.

 

Week 2
Liberation theology and migration

In this session, we will discuss what liberation theology has to say about borders and migration, and ask: just what does liberation for migrants mean? And how does this line up with contemporary approaches to border policing?

  

Week 3
Liberation theology and the environmental crisis

This session focuses on climate change as a challenge for liberation, and asks how liberation theology can inform ecotheology and the Christian response to the environmental crisis.

 

Week 4
Liberation theology and transness

Transness challenges many of our societal preconceptions around what it is to be a body, and therein touches on a range of other issues addressed by movements such as Disability theology, feminist theology, and Black theology. Noting the embryonic state of the field, this week asks: what would a theology of transliberation look like?

 

Week 5
Liberation theology and penal abolition 

States exercise coercive control over their citizens through a variety of repressive apparatus– not least the penal system. This session asks, what does liberation theology have to say about criminalisation, and the institutions around it? What does liberation look like for those caught up in the institutions around it? And does a Christian vision of liberation require or suggest any alternatives?

Course
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Tutors

Dr Nicolete Burbach

Dr Nicolete Burbach is the Social and Environmental Justice Lead at the London Jesuit Centre. Her PhD thesis looked at Pope Francis’ hermeneutics of uncertainty, and her research focuses on resourcing Pope Francis to think through issues of alienation and disagreement, with a particular focus on navigating the difficulties around trans inclusion in the Church. Previously, she has taught modules on postmodern theology and Catholic Social Teaching, both at Durham University.

MY LJC