Feminist practical theology and (un)making structural violence against immigrant women and families

A key thesis of this essay is that exploration of the construct of structural violence—especially as iterated in Johan Galtung’s notion of the triangle of violence—can help elucidate the theological concept of systemic or social sin, and thereby help Christians generate a more adequate ethical respo...

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Main Author: Susanne Johnson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná 2018-04-01
Series:Pistis & Praxis: Teologia e Pastoral
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.pucpr.br/index.php/pistispraxis/article/view/23588
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spelling doaj-14d489799a9c4dedb81e628a3b59cfe72020-11-25T03:18:19ZengPontifícia Universidade Católica do ParanáPistis & Praxis: Teologia e Pastoral1984-37552175-18382018-04-0110110.7213/2175-1838.10.001.DS0422216Feminist practical theology and (un)making structural violence against immigrant women and familiesSusanne Johnson0Perkins School of TheologyA key thesis of this essay is that exploration of the construct of structural violence—especially as iterated in Johan Galtung’s notion of the triangle of violence—can help elucidate the theological concept of systemic or social sin, and thereby help Christians generate a more adequate ethical response to issues and dilemmas in immigration debates in the U.S. today. The notion of structural evil and sin can proffer insight into the reality of complex webs and entanglements in structural violence that enshrouds the lives and journeys of unauthorized Latino/a immigrants into the United States, and into the role of U.S. citizens in perpetuating such violence. Structural violence, seen theologically as social sin, is a conceptual key to “critical seeing” of political, social, legal, and economic structures and policies that drive forced economic immigration in the first place, and also to exposing the moral oblivion and blindness that thwarts the church from offering hospitality and justice to unauthorized immigrants. I argue that because structural violence originates in the vastly unequal distribution of power and privilege among human agents, which systematically advantages elite power brokers at the expense of people on the lowest rungs of society, then repentance from structural violence must entail collective efforts toward redistributing power, and ensuring more equitable access to resources needed for human flourishing. The primary practice and discipline dedicated to this radical task is faith-based community organizing.https://periodicos.pucpr.br/index.php/pistispraxis/article/view/23588structural violence. latina immigrants. justice. faith-based organizing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Susanne Johnson
spellingShingle Susanne Johnson
Feminist practical theology and (un)making structural violence against immigrant women and families
Pistis & Praxis: Teologia e Pastoral
structural violence. latina immigrants. justice. faith-based organizing
author_facet Susanne Johnson
author_sort Susanne Johnson
title Feminist practical theology and (un)making structural violence against immigrant women and families
title_short Feminist practical theology and (un)making structural violence against immigrant women and families
title_full Feminist practical theology and (un)making structural violence against immigrant women and families
title_fullStr Feminist practical theology and (un)making structural violence against immigrant women and families
title_full_unstemmed Feminist practical theology and (un)making structural violence against immigrant women and families
title_sort feminist practical theology and (un)making structural violence against immigrant women and families
publisher Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná
series Pistis & Praxis: Teologia e Pastoral
issn 1984-3755
2175-1838
publishDate 2018-04-01
description A key thesis of this essay is that exploration of the construct of structural violence—especially as iterated in Johan Galtung’s notion of the triangle of violence—can help elucidate the theological concept of systemic or social sin, and thereby help Christians generate a more adequate ethical response to issues and dilemmas in immigration debates in the U.S. today. The notion of structural evil and sin can proffer insight into the reality of complex webs and entanglements in structural violence that enshrouds the lives and journeys of unauthorized Latino/a immigrants into the United States, and into the role of U.S. citizens in perpetuating such violence. Structural violence, seen theologically as social sin, is a conceptual key to “critical seeing” of political, social, legal, and economic structures and policies that drive forced economic immigration in the first place, and also to exposing the moral oblivion and blindness that thwarts the church from offering hospitality and justice to unauthorized immigrants. I argue that because structural violence originates in the vastly unequal distribution of power and privilege among human agents, which systematically advantages elite power brokers at the expense of people on the lowest rungs of society, then repentance from structural violence must entail collective efforts toward redistributing power, and ensuring more equitable access to resources needed for human flourishing. The primary practice and discipline dedicated to this radical task is faith-based community organizing.
topic structural violence. latina immigrants. justice. faith-based organizing
url https://periodicos.pucpr.br/index.php/pistispraxis/article/view/23588
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