1st Edition

Conflict and Catholic Social Ethics An Interdisciplinary Approach

By Taylor J. Ott Copyright 2025
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book focuses on the question of how to understand conflict and its place in Catholic and Christian social ethics. The author examines Catholic social teaching (CST) for its explicit mentions of conflict or contention, and analyzes the way that CST addresses the subjects of peace, labor, and environment. While CST offers precedent to think about conflict within the frame of Catholic ethics, its lack of explicit engagement remains a major obstacle to a full, rich, and concrete understanding of the fabric of society and the work of social justice. Any social ethic that is not informed by the presence of conflict misses a major dynamic in society, and therefore leads to ethical judgements that are at best inadequate, and at worst, actively harmful. Building upon the insight of respected thinkers within Catholic social thought, this study is based on an interdisciplinary method that engages sociology, political theory, postcolonial theory, and intersectional feminist ethics. The book will be of particular interest to theological ethicists and those who work with modern Catholic social teaching.

    Introduction

    1 The Invisible Context: Conflict and Social Transformation in Catholic Social Teaching

    2 Theorizing Conflict: Sociological Approaches

    3 Ethics at the Crossroads: Conflict and Intersectional Feminism

    4 Conflict in Catholic Social Thought: Pathways and Stumbling Blocks

    5 Toward a Conflict Hermeneutic: Seeing Human Personhood and Relationship Through a Conflict Lens

    6 Conflict in Focus: Adjunct Unions at Catholic Colleges and Universities

    7 Conflict in Focus: Women’s Ordination in the Roman Catholic Church

    Conclusion

    Bibliography

    Biography

    Taylor J. Ott is a postdoctoral research fellow in the Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium.