IN
THE EAST Randall
Balmer teaches about American religion at Barnard College, Columbia University,
and is the author of Thy Kingdom Come: How the Religious Right Distorts the
Faith and Threatens America — An Evangelical's Lament (Perseus, July 2006).
Contact 212-854-3292, rb281@columbia.edu.
Arthur
B. Dobrin is the leader emeritus of the Ethical Humanist Society of Long
Island and a professor of humanities at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y.
He teaches courses in ethical education, personal ethics and religious ethics.
His books include, as author, Ethics for Everyone: How to Improve Your Moral
Intelligence (John Wiley & Sons, 2002). Contact 516-463-6172, arthur.b.dobrin@hofstra.edu.
Bernard K. Freamon is a law professor at Seton Hall University
in South Orange, N.J. He specializes in Islamic jurisprudence and Islamic legal
history and has an interest in ethics. Contact 973-642-8827, freamobe@shu.edu.
Rabbi
Eugene Borowitz is a professor of Jewish religious thought at the Jewish
Institute of Religion at Hebrew Union College in New York, N.Y. His books include,
as co-author, The Jewish Moral Values (Jewish Publication Society, 1999).
Contact 212-824-2236, eborowitz@huc.edu.
Michael
Novak is a philosopher, theologian and public policy commentator at the
American Enterprise Institute
in Washington, D.C. Contact through his assistant there, 202-862-5839, mnovak@aei.org.
Political
theorist and philosopher Michael
Walzer is a professor of social science at the Institute
for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J. He co-edits Dissent
magazine. Contact 609-734-8253, walzer@ias.edu.
Jeffrey
Stout, a religion professor at Princeton University and contributing editor
to the Journal
of Religious Ethics, is the author of Democracy and Tradition
(Princeton University Press, new edition 2005).Contact 609-258-4485,
stout@princeton.edu.
Akbar
S. Ahmed is chairman of the Islamic studies department at American University
in Washington, D.C. He is author of Islam Under Siege: Living Dangerously
in a Post-Honor World (Polity Press, 2003). Contact Clark Gregor, university
media relations, 202-885-5935, gregor@american.edu.
Becky
Garrison, a Manhattan-based freelance writer and senior contributing editor
for the religious satire magazine The Wittenburg Door, is the author
of Red and Blue God, Black and Blue Church: Eyewitness Accounts of How American
Churches are Hijacking Jesus, Bagging the Beatitudes, and Worshipping the Almighty
Dollar ( Jossey-Bass, 2006). Contact bgthedoor@aol.com.
IN
THE SOUTHEAST
Read
a July
20, 2006, Associated Press report, published
by the Macon Telegraph, about the political future of former Christian
Coalition head Ralph Reed after he lost the Republican primary for Georgia lieutenant
governor.
Read
a May
27, 2006, Miami Herald column about the phrase "culture of corruption."
Elizabeth
Bounds is associate professor of Christian ethics and coordinator of the Initiative
in Religious Practices and Practical Theology at Emory University in Atlanta.
She says religious bodies are not always adept at teaching how values should
be applied in everyday life. Contact ebounds@emory.edu.
Susan
J. Tolchin, a professor of public policy at George Mason University in Fairfax,
Va., and journalist Martin Tolchin, former publisher and editor in chief of
The Hill newspaper,
have co-authored several books on congressional ethics, including Glass Houses:
Congressional Ethics and the Politics of Venom (Westview Press, 2003). Contact
her at 202-625-7782, tolchin@gmu.edu.
Keith
Goree directs the Applied
Ethics Institute at St. Petersburg College, St. Petersburg, Fla. Contact
727-341-4313, Goree.Keith@spcollege.edu.
Ronald
T. Libby is a professor of political science and public administration at the
University of North Florida. He specializes in political ethics and is a senior
fellow at the Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Florida Center for Ethics, Public Policy and the Professions.
Contact 904-620-1927, rlibby@unf.edu.
Anthony
V. Alfieri is a law professor at Miami University in Coral Gables, Fla.,
where he founded and directs the Center
for Ethics and Public Service. The center offers ethics training to government
agencies. Contact 305-284-2735, aalfieri@law.miami.edu.
Steven
M. Tipton is a professor of the sociology of religion at Emory University in
Atlanta. He researches American religion and politics, and the sociology of
morality. Contact 404-727-6333, stipton@emory.edu.
Kathy
Kinlaw is director of the Center for Ethics at Emory University.
Contact 404-727-2201, kkinlaw@emory.edu.
Tom Morris is a
philosopher, author and president of the Morris
Institute for Human Values in Wilmington, N.C. His books include Making
Sense of It All (Eerdmans, 1992), God and the Philosophers (Oxford,
1994)and Philosophy for Dummies (Wiley, 1999). Contact 910-256-6119,
tmorris@morrisinstitute.com .
IN
THE SOUTH
Read
a Reuters
article, published June 17, 2006, by TheBoston Globe, about
the ousting of Rep. William Jefferson, D-La., from the House Ways and Means
Committee.
David
Reidy is an assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Tennessee
in Knoxville. His research interests include integrity and public office. Contact
865-974-7210, dreidy@utk.edu.
Kenneth
Keulman is professor of ethics at Loyola University in New Orleans. Contact
504-865-3943, kkeulman@wcfia.harvard.edu.
Mark
Hulsether is an associate professor of religious studies and American studies
at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He is working on a book titled Religion,
Culture and Politics in Modern America, to be published by Edinburgh University
Press. Contact 865-974-2466, mhulseth@utk.edu.
IN
THE MIDWEST
Read
a July
2, 2006, ABC News report on Rep. Alan B. Mollohan, D-W.Va., who is under
FBI investigation.
Read
an April
17, 2006, CBS/AP article about the conviction of former Illinois Gov. George
Ryan on racketeering and fraud charges.
Read
an April
26, 2006, New York Times story about how earmarking national funds
for specific Nebraska projects has become an issue in a Senate race.
Read
an Aug.
18, 2005, CBS/AP story about current Ohio Gov. Bob Taft pleading no contest
to four misdemeanor ethics charges.
Jean
Bethke Elshtain is a professor of social and political ethics at the University
of Chicago’s Divinity School in Chicago and specializes in the link between
political and ethical convictions. Contact 773-702-7252 or through her secretary,
773-702-8238, smcgee@uchicago.edu.
Rebecca
Konyndyk DeYoung is a philosophy professor at Calvin College in Grand Rapids,
Mich. She is an expert on ethics and has written on virtue and vice. She says
organized religion has largely bought into the idea of religion as a private
matter – something to be practiced at home and in church, but not necessarily
at work. Contact 616-526-6418, rdeyoung@calvin.edu.
The
Rev. Robert
Sirico is president of the Acton
Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty in Grand Rapids, Mich. Contact
616-454-3080, rsirico@acton.org.
David
Solomon is associate professor of philosophy at Notre Dame University and
directs the Center
for Ethics and Culture. Contact 574-631-9656, solomon.1@nd.edu.
Paul
Weithman is a professor of philosophy at Notre Dame University and the author
of Religion and the Obligations of Citizenship (Cambridge University
Press, 2002). Contact 574-631-5182, weithman.1@nd.edu.
Loyal
D. Rue is author of By the Grace of Guile: The Role of Deception in Natural
History and Human Affairs (Oxford University Press, 1994) and professor
of religion and philosophy at Luther College, an Evangelical Lutheran school
in Decorah, Iowa. He says organized religion has lost the moral authority it
once had. Contact rueloyal@luther.edu.
IN
THE SOUTHWEST
Read
an Associated
Press story, published July 21, 2006, by CBS News, about the fining and
shutting-down of a fund-raising organization for former Rep. Tom DeLay, R-Texas,
who had been House majority leader. Read an April
10, 2006, New York Observer column about DeLay’s resignation.
Read
an Associated
Press story about plans to retry former New Mexico State Treasurer Robert
Vigil on public corruption charges. The article was published June 15, 2006,
in TheAlbuquerque Tribune. Read more about the case in AP stories
published by the Tribune on June
10, 2006, and June
9, 2006.
Robin
Meyers is a United Church of Christ pastor, syndicated columnist and professor
of rhetoric at Oklahoma City University. Books he has written include Why
the Christian Right Is Wrong: A Minister’s Manifesto for Taking Back Your Faith,
Your Flag, Your Future (Jossey-Bass, May 2006). Contact rmeyers@okcu.edu.
Daryl
Koehn is a professor of business ethics and director of the Center for Business Ethics
at the University of St. Thomas, a Catholic school in Houston. Contact 713-942-5917,
koehnd@stthom.edu.
Charles
Curran is a professor of human values at the Perkins School of Theology
at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. He specializes in moral theology,
social ethics and the role of the church as a moral and political actor in society.
Contact 214-768-4073, ccurran@smu.edu.
Howard
Hendricks is chairman of the Center
for Christian Leadership at Dallas Theological Seminary. Contact 800-992-0998
ext. 3515 or 214-841-3515, ccl@dts.edu.
Carolyn
M. Warner is associate professor of political science at Arizona State University
in Tempe, and her research interests include religion, politics, patronage and
corruption. Contact 480-965-5201, carolyn.warner@asu.edu.
Jack
Green Musselman directs the Center
for Ethics and Leadership at St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas. He
says he would like to see more media coverage of the way ethical norms and religious
values intersect, overlap and reinforce one another (or fail to) as part of
the public debate about morality. Contact 512-428-1026, jackgm@stedwards.edu.
Elaine
E. Englehardt is a professor of philosophy and ethics at Utah Valley State College
in Orem, Utah, where she directs the Center for the Study of Ethics. Contact
801-863-8129, englehel@uvsc.edu.
IN
THE WEST/NORTHWEST Read a July
5, 2006, North County (Calif.) Times report about how former
U.S. Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham, R-Calif., is doing in prison. He was convicted
of bribery and tax evasion.
Mark D. Roberts is senior
pastor of Irvine Presbyterian Church in Irvine, Calif., and author of Dare
to Be True: Living in the Freedom of Complete Honesty (Waterbrook Press,
2003). He says people separate their religious convictions from their everyday
lives, and the challenge for the church is to teach people how to connect them.
Contact 949-786-7276, roberts@irvinepres.org.
John Hospers is a philosopher, an emeritus professor at the University
of Southern California and an editor at Liberty magazine. In 1972, he was the Libertarian Party’s first presidential
candidate. Contact 213-740-4084, dreher@usc.edu.
Darrel
Moellendorf directs the Institute
for Ethics and Public Affairs at San Diego State University in California.
Contact 619-594-5249, dmoellen@mail.sdsu.edu.
S. Cromwell Crawford
is professor and chairman of religion at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
He is author of The Evolution of Hindu Ethical Ideals (University of
Hawaii Press, 1982) and teaches a course on ethics in world religions. Contact
808-956-4200, scrawfor@hawaii.edu or Szabocrawf@aol.com.