SOURCE GUIDE Love and forgiveness:
experts and organizations
IN
THE NORTHEAST Connecticut,
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont
• Ifi
Amadiume is professor of religion at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H.,
and co-editor of The Politics of Memory: Truth, Healing & Social Justice.
She has published three award-winning collections of poetry; a fourth collection
is just out. Her poems explore love of people, nature, Sufism and struggle,
celebrating activism and activists. Contact 603-646-1692 ifi.amadiume@dartmouth.edu.
• Sarah
Coakley and Martin Nowak are researching the evolution of altruistic behavior,
forgiveness and unselfish love at Harvard University. Coakley is Visiting Professor
of Systematic and Philosophical Theology at Harvard Divinity School. Nowak is
a professor of mathematics and biology and director of the Program
for Evolutionary Dynamics, a quantitative approach to evolutionary theory.
Contact through Amy Ashbacher at Harvard, 617-496-4737, ashbach@fas.harvard.edu or martin_nowak@harvard.edu.
• Robert
Coles is professor of psychiatry and medical humanities at Harvard University
Medical School. Renowned for his work with poor and disadvantaged children,
Coles is co-chairman of A Campaign for Forgiveness Research. His five-volume
Children of Crisis won the Pulitzer Prize in 1973. Contact 617-591-9389,
rcoles@fas.harvard.edu.
• Dr.
Gregory
Fricchione is an associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School
in Cambridge, Mass. He is director of the Benson-Henry
Institute for Mind Body Medicine and an expert on stress and depression.
Among his publications are “Illness and the Origin of Caring” in the March 1993
issue of the Journal of Medical Humanities. Contact 617-726-7695, gfricchione@partners.org.
• Charles
Griswold is a philosophy professor at Boston University whose most recent
book is Forgiveness: A Philosophical Exploration (2007), which examines
the nature of forgiveness and sympathy and their political dimensions. Contact
617-353-2571, griswold@bu.edu.
• The
Rev. Raymond G. Helmick is an adjunct faculty member in the theology department
of Boston College and co-editor of Forgiveness and Reconciliation: Religion,
Public Policy and Conflict Transformation. He specializes in studying and
mediating international conflicts, including the Middle East and Northern Ireland.
Contact617-552-3880, raymond.helmick@bc.edu.
• Jerome
Kagan is the Daniel and Amy Starch Research Professor of Psychology, Emeritus,
at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. His research on human temperament
has been influential. He spoke about the human moral sense at a 1999 conference
on empathy and altruism. Contact 617-495-3870, jk@wjh.harvard.edu.
• Nasser
Hussain is assistant professor of law, jurisprudence and social thought at Amherst
College in Amherst, Mass. He co-edited Forgiveness, Mercy and Clemency
(2007) and teaches the courses Law, God and Modernity and When Law Fails. Contact
413-542-8412, nhussain@amherst.edu.
• Harold
S. Kushner is rabbi laureate of Temple Israel in Natick, Mass., where he resides.
Among his books is How Good Do We Have to Be? A New Understanding of Guilt
and Forgiveness and When Bad Things Happen to Good People. Contact508-650-3521.
• John
Makransky is an associate professor of Buddhism and comparative theology
at Boston College. He is also a teacher and practitioner of Tibetan Buddhism.
In his 2007 book Awakening Through Love: Unveiling Your Deepest Goodness,
he discusses love, compassion and forgiveness. Contact makransk@bc.edu.
• Christopher
McQueen is a lecturer on the study of religion at Harvard Divinity School and
dean of students at Harvard Extension School. He is an expert on “engaged Buddhism,”
the application of Buddhist teachings and practices to improve society. Contact
617-495-3481, Christopher_queen@harvard.edu.
• Martha
L. Minow is the Jeremiah Smith Jr. Professor of Law at Harvard University.
She is co-editor of Imagine Coexistence: Restoring Humanity After Violent
Ethnic Conflict and author of Between Vengeance and Forgiveness: Facing
History After Genocide and Mass Violence. Contact 617-496-1768, minow@law.harvard.edu, or through assistant
Kristin Flower, 617-496-1768.
• Laurie
Anne Pearlman co-founded the Traumatic Stress Institute and the Trauma
Research, Education and Training Institute, where she still serves as president.
She also directs the Clinical Associates Program of the Headington
Institute, which offers psychological and spiritual support to relief and
development workers around the world. She serves on the practice committee of
the American Psychological Association’s trauma division and the complex
trauma task force of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.
She did research with Professor Ervin Staub on forgiveness in Rwanda and currently
works on a public education project in East Africa that includes psychological
trauma recovery and reconciliation. Contact her in Massachusetts, 413-636-8210,
Lpearlmanphd@comcast.net.
• Rodney
L. Petersen is executive director of The Boston
Theological Institute, which offers a certificate program in religion and
conflict transformation that includes forgiveness training. He is the co-editor
of Forgiveness and Reconciliation: Religion, Public Policy and Conflict Transformationand teaches classes in conflict resolution and reconciliation in religious
and international arenas. Contact 617-527-4880 ext. 2, petersen@bostontheological.org.
• Stephen
J. Pope is a theology professor at Boston College. His interests include
love, justice and charity within the Christian tradition. Among his publications
is The Evolution of Altruism & the Ordering of Love. Contact 617-552.3892,
popest@bc.edu.
• Sharon
Salzberg has taught insight meditation worldwide for more than 30 years. She
is a co-founder of the Insight
Meditation Society and the Barre Center for Buddhist Studies in Barre, Mass.
Her many books include The Force of Kindness: Change Your Life With Love
& Compassion and Loving-Kindness: The Revolutionary Art of Happiness.
Contact her through the society’s communications director Gyano Gibson, 978-355-4378
ext. 280.
• Solomon
Schimmel, professor of education and psychology at Hebrew College in Newton,
Mass., researched post-apartheid South Africa to write the award-winning Wounds
Not Healed by Time: The Power of Repentance and Forgiveness. Contact 617-559-8621,
sschimmel@hebrewcollege.edu.
• Ervin
Staub is a psychology professor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst,
and founding director, emeritus, of the Ph.D. concentration in the psychology
of peace and the prevention of violence, there. A Holocaust survivor,
he studies helping behavior and altruism and the roots and prevention of violence
between groups, especially after mass killings, genocide and terrorism. He also
promotes reconciliation in real-world settings. He has worked with police on
reducing the use of unnecessary force after the Rodney King incident, on healing
and reconciliation in New Orleans after Katrina, and on healing, reconciliation
and the prevention of new violence in Rwanda, Burundi, and the Congo. He is
the author of The Roots of Evil: The Origins of Genocide and Other Group
Violence and The Psychology of Good and Evil: Why Children, Adults and
Groups Help and Harm Others. He is working on two books, tentatively titled
Understanding Origins, Prevention and Reconciliation: Genocide, Mass Killing,
Intractable Conflict and Terrorism; and A Brighter Future: Inclusive
Caring, Moral Courage and Altruism Born of Suffering. Contact 413-545-0071,
estaub@psych.umass.edu.
• The
Rev. Edward C. Vacek is a professor of moral theology at Weston Jesuit School
of Theology in Cambridge, Mass. He wrote Love, Human and Divine. Contact
617-492-1960 ext. 212, evacek@wjst.edu.
• Miroslav
Volf is director of the Yale
Center for Faith and Culture at Yale University and Henry B. Wright
Professor of Systematic Theology at Yale Divinity School. He is author of Free
of Charge: Giving and Forgiving in a Culture Stripped of Grace. Contact
203-432-5332, miroslav.volf@yale.edu.
• Paul
Wink is a professor of psychology at Wellesley College in Wellesley, Mass.
He researches adult development and aging and has studied the effects of religion
and spirituality on life development and choices, including religious commitment
and altruistic behavior. Contact 781-283-3729.
IN
THE EAST EAST
Delaware, District
of Columbia, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania
• Nancy
Berlinger is deputy director and associate for religious studies at The
Hastings Center, a bioethics research institute in Garrison, N.Y. She is the
author of After Harm: Medical Error and the Ethics of Forgiveness. Contact
845-424-4040 ext. 210, berlingern@thehastingscenter.org.
• Brian
Childs is director of clinical ethics and spiritual care for Shore Health System
in the University of Maryland Medical System. He has researched how forgiveness
training impacts the mental and physical health of AIDS patients. His dissertation
at Princeton Theological Seminary explored forgiveness among preschool children.
Contact 410-228-5511 ext. 5259.
• Susanne
Denham is a psychology professor at George Mason University in Washington,
D.C., who has studied how the ability to forgive develops in the first decade
of life. Contact 703-993-1378, sdenham@gmu.edu.
• Louise
DeSalvo is the Jenny Hunter Endowed Scholar for Creative Writing and Literature
at Hunter College at the City University of New York. She is the author of the
memoirs Crazy in the Kitchen: Food, Feuds and Forgiveness in an Italian American
Family and the book Writing as a Way of Healing: How Telling Our Stories
Transforms Our Lives, a resource for writers recovering from trauma,
illness, or terrorist acts. Contact 212-772-5164, louisedesalvo@comcast.net.
• Frederick
A. DiBlasio is a professor at the University of Maryland School of Social
Work whose research and practice focuses on the clinical use of forgiveness,
particularly within families and marriages. His model on decision-based forgiveness
has been proved to be an effective treatment for helping people forgive. Contact
410-706-7799, fdiblasio@ssw.umaryland.edu. Donald
Kraybill is Distinguished College Professor and senior fellow of the Young
Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabethtown College in Elizabethtown,
Pa. He has more than 20 books to his credit, including (as co-author) Amish
Grace: How Forgiveness Transcended Tragedy, which explores the Amish response
to the 2006 murders at Nickel Mines; (as co-editor) Building Communities
of Compassion: Mennonite Mutual Aid in Theory and Practice; and (as co-author)
Mennonite Peacemaking: From Quietism to Activism. Contact kraybilld@etown.edu.
• Lorne
Ladner is a clinical psychologist, practitioner of Tibetan Buddhism and author
of The Lost Art of Compassion: Discovering the Practice of Happiness in the
Meeting of Buddhism and Psychology. He teaches at the Guhyasamaja
Center in the Washington, D.C., area. Contact him through the center, 202-841-2864,
or through publisher HarperOne in San Francisco, 415-477-4400.
• Seyyed
Hossein Nasr is University Professor of Islamic Studies at George Washington
University in Washington, D.C., and a leading scholar of Islam. He has written
more than 50 books, including The Heart of Islam: Enduring Values for Humanity.
Much of his work focuses on Islamic spiritual values, and he is often quoted
in the media. Contact 202-994-5704, zsirat@gwu.edu.
• Feisal
Abdul Rauf is founder and CEO of the American
Society for Muslim Advancement. He is also imam of Masjid Al-Farah, a mosque
in New York City. He is a leading spokesman about Islamic beliefs and practices.
Listen to a video
posted at Beliefnet in which he discusses divine love. Contact the society’s
New York office, 212-870-2552.
• The
Rev. Donald W. Shriver Jr. is professor emeritus at Union Theological Seminary
in New York City and a former president of it. He is the author of Honest
Patriots: Loving a Country Enough to Remember Its Misdeeds and An Ethic
for Enemies: Forgiveness in Politics. Contact 518-392-2511, dwshriver@aol.com.
• June
Tangney is a psychology professor at George Mason University in Washington,
D.C., who has studied how individual traits and situations contribute to forgiveness.
Contact 703-993-1365, jtangney@gmu.edu.
• Lydia
R. Temoshok is director of the behavioral medicine program at the Institute
of Human Virology and professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine
in Baltimore. She is internationally known for her work in psychoneuroimmunology,
which studies the relationship among mind, the central nervous system, the immune
system and the outcome of immunologically mediated diseases. In particular,
she has studied the role of forgiveness in the health of people living with
HIV and AIDS. Contact 410-706-2621,
temoshok@umbi.umd.edu.
• Julia
A. Upton is professor and provost at St. John’s University in Queens, N.Y.
She is author of A Time for Embracing: Reclaiming Reconciliation.
Contact 718-990-6308, uptonj@stjohns.edu.
• David
Sloan Wilson is a professor of evolutionary biology at Binghamton University
in Binghamton, N.Y. One area of his expertise is the evolution of altruism.
Contact 607-777-4393, dwilson@binghamton.edu.
IN
THE SOUTHEAST Florida,
Georgia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina
•
Rabbi David
R. Blumenthal is Jay and Leslie Cohen Professor of Judaic Studies at Emory
University in Atlanta. He wrote the article “Repentance
and Forgiveness” for CrossCurrents to explain the Jewish view of
forgiveness to Catholics and other Christians. He is also the author of Facing
the Abusing God: A Theology of Protest and The Banality of Good and Evil:
Moral Lessons From the Shoah & Jewish Tradition. Contact404-727-7545,
reldrb@emory.edu.
• Frans
B.M. deWaal is the C.H. Candler Professor of Psychology at Emory University,
and he directs the Living
Links Center at the Yerkes
National Primate Research Center in Atlanta. His renowned research with
primates has looked at the evolution of human emotions and morals, and he has
studied whether apes can feel sympathy. He has studied how nonhuman primates
reconcile after fights. Contact 404-727-7898 or 404-727-3695, dewaal@emory.edu.
• Frank
Fincham is Eminent Scholar and director of the Family Institute at Florida
State University. One of his primary research interests is forgiveness within
families, and he has done research and published articles on forgiveness between
spouses and between parents and children. Contact 850-644-4914, ffincham@fsu.edu.
• Amy
Laura Hall is an associate professor of theological ethics at Duke Divinity
School in Durham, N.C. She teaches courses on Christian love. Contact 919-660-3403,
alhall@div.duke.edu.
• Timothy
P. Jackson is associate professor of Christian ethics at the Candler School
of Theology at Emory University in Atlanta. He has written two books on love
and justice. Contact 404-727-0818, tjack05@emory.edu.
• The
Rev. L. Gregory Jones is professor of theology and dean of Duke Divinity School
in Durham, N.C. Among his books is Embodying Forgiveness:A Theological
Analysis. An ordained United Methodist pastor, he is often quoted on the
subjects of forgiveness and apology. Contact 919-660-3434, gjones@div.duke.edu.
• Lisa
Barnes Lampman is senior consultant at Dare Mighty Things and editor of
God and the Victim: Theological Reflections on Evil, Victimization, Justice
and Forgiveness. She formerly worked as vice president of Prison Fellowship
Ministries. Contact her in Virginia, 703-752-4331, lbl@daremightythings.com.
• Michael
E. McCullough is professor of psychology and religious studies at the University
of Miami in Coral Cables. He directs the Laboratory for Social Clinical Psychology,
where the consequences of forgiveness and related moral emotions and their effects
on health and well-being are being studied. He is co-editor of Forgiveness:
Theory, Research and Practice and author of the forthcoming Beyond Revenge:
The Evolution of the Forgiveness Instinct. Contact 305-284-8057, mikem@miami.edu.
• Mariah
Burton Nelson is author of The Unburdened Heart: Five Keys to Forgiveness
& Freedom. See a 2000 article
about forgiveness myths on her Web site. Contact her in Virginia, 703-276-8323,
Mariah@mariahburtonnelson.com.
• Graham
M. Schweig specializes in love mysticism within the religions of India and
has published a number of books on the theme of divine love. He is associate
professor of religion and director of the Indic Studies Program at Christopher
Newport University in Newport News, Va. Contact 757-594-7959, gschweig@cnu.edu.
• Jeffrey
Sonis is assistant professor of social medicine and family medicine at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He researches the psychosocial
consequences of human rights violations. He has also studied the potential for
mechanisms that facilitate justice, such as truth commissions and tribunals,
for improving racial and ethnic tension, including in South Africa; Greensboro,
N.C.; and Cambodia. Contact 919-843-8264, jsonis@med.unc.edu.
• Everett
L. Worthington Jr. is a psychology professor at Virginia Commonwealth University.
He was the founding executive director of A
Campaign for Forgiveness Research for its first seven years, and he is one
of the country’s foremost experts on empirical research about forgiveness.
Among his forthcoming books is Just Forgiving, about the relationship
between personal forgiveness and social justice. Contact 804-828-1150, eworth@vcu.edu.
IN
THE SOUTH Alabama,
Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee
• Ruby
Bridges Hall founded the Ruby
Bridges Foundation in 1999 out of her experience in 1960 as the first black
child to attend an all-white elementary school. The foundation, based in New
Orleans, promotes tolerance, respect and acceptance of differences. She is also
co-chair of A Campaign for Forgiveness Research. Contact 1-800-798-7829.
• David
Patterson holds the Bornblum Chair of Excellence in Judaic Studies at the University
of Memphis and is director of the university’s Bornblum Judaic Studies
Program. Contact 901-678-2919, dapttrsn@memphis.edu.
IN
THE MIDWEST Illinois,
Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota,
Ohio, South Dakota, West Virginia, Wisconsin
• Radhi
H. Al-Mabuk is associate professor of educational psychology at the University
of Northern Iowa whose research focuses on the psychology of revenge – its causes,
consequences and ways to deal with it. He has written a book on that topic as
well as several articles on forgiveness. Contact 319-273-2694, Radhi.Al-Mabuk@uni.edu.
• Stephen
Angell, who teaches at the Earlham School of Religion in Richmond, Ind., can
address how Quakers have dealt with the issue of forgiveness. Contact 765-983-1496,
angelst@earlham.edu.
• The
Rev. Homer
U. Ashby Jr. is professor of pastoral care at McCormick Theological Seminary
in Chicago. He is the author of the book Our Home Is Over Jordan: A Black
Pastoral Theology, and he wrote the article “Being Forgiven: Toward a Thicker
Description of Forgiveness” in the 2003 Journal of Pastoral Care and Counseling.
Contact 773-947-6364, hashby@mccormick.edu.
• C.
Daniel Batson is a professor of social psychology at the University of Kansas
in Lawrence. His research has focused on why people help others and on the relationships
between altruism, empathy and religion. He wrote The Altruism Question: Toward
a Social-Psychological Answer and co-authored Religion and the Individual:
A Social-Psychological Perspective. Contact 785-864-9831.
• Bernard
V. Brady is a professor and chairman of the theology department at the University
of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minn. He wrote Christian Love: How Christians
Through the Ages Have Understood Love. Contact 651-962-5303.
• Don
Browning is the Alexander Campbell Professor Emeritus of Ethics and the
Social Sciences at the University of Chicago Divinity School. His many interests
include the relationship of theology and psychology, religion and family, and
the subjects of empathy and selfless love. Contact 773-702-9249, dsbrowni@midway.uchicago.edu.
• Kim
Cameron is professor of management and organizations at the University of
Michigan’s Ross School of Business. He has researched whether corporations can
more successfully weather downsizing if they ask forgiveness from their employees.
He has also studied how other virtues, such as humility and compassion, affect
the success of organizations. Contact 734-615-5247, kim_cameron@umich.edu.
• Avis
Clendenen and Troy
W. Martin are professors of religious studies at St. Xavier University in
Chicago and co-authors of Forgiveness: Finding Freedom Through Reconciliation,
which explores forgiveness through Christian teaching. Contact 773-298-3444,
martin@sxu.edu.
• Robert
D. Enright is a pioneer in forgiveness research. He is an educational psychology
professor at the University of Wisconsin and a board member of the International Forgiveness
Institute, which was set up to disseminate the results of his research on
forgiveness. His books include Forgiveness Is a Choice: A Step-By-Step Process
for Resolving Anger and Restoring Hope.Contact 608-262-0835, forgive@sbcglobal.net.
• John
Paul Lederach is professor of international peacebuilding at the Joan B.
Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame
in South Bend, Ind. He is known for his international work in conflict transformation,
which includes work in Colombia, the Philippines, Nepal and Tajikistan, and
in East and West Africa. His books include The Moral Imagination: The Art
and Soul of Building Peace. Contact 574-631-6970, jplbus@gmail.com.
• Lois
E. Malcolm is associate professor of systematic theology at Luther Seminary
in St. Paul, Minn. She is co-author of the forthcoming book Teaching Healing
and Forgiveness: A Multi-Dimensional Approach. Contact 651-641-3582, lmalcolm@luthersem.edu.
• Sister
Joan Mueller
is professor of theology and Christian spirituality at Creighton University
in Omaha, Neb., and the founder of the Franciscan
Sisters of Joy. She is the author of numerous books and articles on Franciscanism
and the related topics of forgiveness, reconciliation and discernment, including
the book Is Forgiveness Possible? Contact 402-280-5816, jmueller@creighton.edu.
• Martha
C. Nussbaum holds appointments in law, divinity and philosophy at the University
of Chicago, where she is the Ernest Freund Distinguished Service Professor of
Law and Ethics. Her wide-ranging interests include contemporary moral and political
philosophy, the history of Western philosophy and the nature of emotions. Her
forthcoming book is Liberty of Conscience: The Attack on America’s Tradition
of Religious Equality, and she is working on a book about compassion. Contact
773-702-3470, martha_nussbaum@law.uchicago.edu.
• Kenneth
Pargament is a psychology professor at Bowling Green State University in
Bowling Green, Ohio, whose research focuses on religious beliefs and health.
He has studied how forgiveness therapy affects people who have divorced. He
is the author of Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapy: Understanding
and Addressing the Sacred. Contact 419-372-8037, kpargam@bgnet.bgsu.edu.
• Stephen
G. Post is professor of bioethics, philosophy and religion at Case Western
Reserve University in Cleveland and a leading scholar on love and altruism.
He is president of The Institute
for Research on Unlimited Love, which studies the benefits of benevolent
love. His most recent book is, as co-author, Why
Good Things Happen to Good People: The Exciting New Research That Proves the
Link Between Doing Good and Living a Longer, Healthier, Happier Life. He
also wrote Unlimited Love: Altruism, Compassion and Service and co-edited
Altruism and Altruistic Love: Science, Philosophy, and Religion in Dialogue.
Contact 216-368-6205, Stephen.post@case.edu.
• Janet
Ramsey is associate professor of congregational care leadership at Luther
Seminary in St. Paul, Minn. She teaches a cross-disciplined course on forgiveness
and healing at Luther, speaks frequently on the topic at churches and conferences,
and is the author of several articles and two Sunday school series on forgiveness.
She is co-authoring, with systematic theologian Lois Malcolm, the forthcoming
book Discerning Forgiveness: Deep Theology, Wise Practice. A licensed
marriage and family therapist, Ramsey has particular interests in ways that
object relations theory and the humanities can help us explore the complexities
of forgiveness. Contact 651-641-3350, jramsey@luthersem.edu.
• Steven
J. Sandage is associate professor of marriage and family studies at Bethel
University in St. Paul, Minn. A psychologist, he is co-author of The Faces
of Forgiveness: Searching for Wholeness and Salvation and To Forgive
Is Human: How to Put Your Past in the Past.Contact 651-638-6170,
s-sandage@bethel.edu.
• Sue
Savage-Rumbaugh is a scientist at Great Ape Trust of Iowa who has studied
how youngsters learn forgiveness from caregivers. Contact 515-243-3580.
• Caroline
J. Simon is the John H. and Jeanne M. Jacobson Professor of Philosophy at Hope
College in Holland, Mich. She specializes in the topics of virtue, moral knowledge
and sexuality and wrote The Disciplined Heart: Love, Destiny & Imagination.
Contact 616-395-7552, simon@hope.edu.
• Charlotte
vanOyen Witvliet is an associate professor of psychology at Hope College
in Holland, Mich. Forgiveness and health constitute one of her primary areas
of interest, and she is researching how the emotion of forgiveness relates to
health. Contact 616-395-7167, witvliet@hope.edu.
• Wendy
M. Wright is a theology professor who holds the John C. Kenefick Chair in
the Humanities at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb. She specializes in the
Salesian tradition, a Christian spiritual tradition founded by St. Francis de
Sales, and can speak about the place of love in Salesian spirituality. Contact
402-280-2611.
IN
THE SOUTHWEST Arizona,
Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah
•
Eileen
Borris is a licensed clinical psychologist who promotes forgiveness in the
healing of emotional wounds on personal and political levels. She is the author
of Finding Forgiveness: A 7-Step Program for Letting Go of Anger and Bitterness
and Forgiveness: The Ultimate Freedom. She is also the director of training
and program development for the Institute for Multi-Track Diplomacy in Arlington,
Va., where she works in international conflict resolution. This work has taken
her to the Middle East, Pakistan, Indonesia, India and the Tibetan government
in exile. She is the former president of the Society for the Study of Peace,
Conflict and Violence of the American Psychological Association. Contact her
in Paradise Valley, Ariz., at 480-951-0544, dreileen@dreileenborris.com.
• Marc
H. Ellis is University Professor of Jewish Studies and director of the Center
for Jewish Studies at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. He is author of Revolutionary
Forgiveness: Essays on Judaism, Christianity and the Future of Religious Life.
Contact 254-710-3609, Marc_Ellis@baylor.edu.
• Ruben
L.F. Habito is a professor of world religions and spirituality at Southern Methodist
University’s Perkins School of Theology. Formerly a Jesuit priest, he founded
the Maria Kannon Zen Center in Dallas. He has written about Buddhism, Christianity
and compassion. Contact 214-768-4334, rhabito@smu.edu.
• The
Rev. Leroy Howe is a United Methodist minister and author of Guilt: Helping
God’s People Find Healing and Forgiveness. He lives in Richardson, Texas,
and maintains a blog called Howe
About. Contact askhoweabout@aol.com.
• Douglas
L. Kelley is associate professor of communication studies at Arizona State
University, where he studies communication patterns in families and personal
relationships. His recent published work has appeared in the Journal of Family
Communication, Journal of Social and Personal Relationships and Communication
Quarterly. With Vince Waldron, he is author of the scholarly text Communicating
Forgiveness and the forthcoming general audience book, Marriage Is For-Giving.
Contact 602-543-6641, Douglas.Kelley@asu.edu.
• The
Rev. Joretta
Marshall is professor of pastoral theology and pastoral counseling at Brite
Divinity School at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth. She is the co-editor
of Forgiveness and Abuse: Jewish and Christian Reflections and the author
of the study guide How Can I Forgive? Contact 817-257-7209, j.marshall@tcu.edu.
• Jeffrie
G. Murphy is professor of law, philosophy and religious studies at Arizona
State University in Tempe. He is the author of Getting Even: Forgiveness
and Its Limits andco-editor of Before Forgiving: Cautionary Views
of Forgiveness in Psychotherapy. Contact 480-965-5856, jeffrie.murphy@asu.edu.
• Vince
Waldron is professor of communication studies at Arizona State University.
With his colleague Douglas Kelley, he is author of the scholarly text Communicating
Forgiveness and the forthcoming general audience book Marriage Is For-Giving.
Contact 602-543-6634, vincent.waldron@asu.edu.
IN
THE WEST/NORTHWEST
Alaska, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon,
Washington, Wyoming
• Thomas
Bradbury is a psychology professor at the University of California at Los Angeles
who studies causes of satisfaction in marriage and educational programs for
couples, including forgiveness. Contact 310-825-3735, bradbury@psych.ucla.edu.
• Roy
L. Brooks is the Warren Distinguished Professor of Law at the University
of San Diego in California and the author of Atonement and Forgiveness: A
New Model for Black Reparations. Contact 619-260-4600, rbrooks@SanDiego.edu.
• Dr.
Antonio
Damasio holds the David Dornsife Chair in Neuroscience and is a psychology
professor at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. A neuroscientist
who has extensively studied human emotions and consciousness, he directs USC’s
Brain and
Creativity Institute. He can speak about the neurobiology of love. Contact
213-740-3462, damasio@usc.edu.
• Rabbi
Elliot
Dorff is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and rector the American Jewish
University in Bel-Air, Calif. He is the author of To Do the Right and the
Good: A Jewish Approach to Modern Social Ethic and Love Your Neighbor
and Yourself: A Jewish Approach to Modern Personal Ethics. Contact 310-440-1255,
edorff@jula.edu.
• William
H. Durham is Bing Professor of Human Biology and chair and professor of anthropological
sciences at Stanford University. He has studied the role of culture in the evolution
of altruism. Contact 650-723-0867, eb.whd@stanford.edu.
• Andrew
Michael Flescher is an assistant professor of religious studies who taught
a course about altruism at California State University in Chico. He co-wrote
the 2007 book The Altruistic Species: Scientific, Philosophical and Religious
Perspectives of Human Benevolence. Contact 530-898-5534, AFlescher@csuchico.edu.
• The
Rev. Marie M. Fortune is founder and senior analyst at the Faith
Trust Institute in Seattle, which works to end sexual and domestic violence,
particularly in faith communities. She co-edited Forgiveness and Abuse: Jewish
and Christian Reflections and is a United Church of Christ minister. Contact
206-634-1903.
• Richard
L. Gorsuch is a professor at Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, Calif.
He wrote the article “The Development of a Scale to Measure Forgiveness” in
the 2001 Journal of Psychology & Christianity. He has also done research
on religion and prejudice, religion and substance abuse, and miracles. Contact
626-584-5527, rgorsuch@fuller.edu.
• Pete
Hill is a psychology professor at Biola University in La Mirada, Calif.
He specializes in the psychology of religion and has done research on individuals’
right to choose whether to forgive, restorative justice and the role of apology.
Contact 562-903-5774, peter.hill@biola.edu.
• Dr.
William
B. Hurlbut is a bioethicist and physician at Stanford University School
of Medicine. A member of President Bush’s Council on Bioethics, he is interested
in the neurophysiology of moral and religious capacities. Among his publications
is Altruism and Altruistic Love: Science, Philosophy and Religion in Dialogue,
which he co-edited. Contact 650-725-2610, ethics@stanford.edu.
• Dacher
Keltner is a psychology professor at the University of California, Berkeley;
co-director of the Greater
Good Science Center; and director of the Berkeley Social Interaction Laboratory.
His research focuses on “prosocial” emotions, such as love, sympathy and gratitude.
Contact 510-642-5368, keltner@socrates.berkeley.edu.
• Frederic
Luskin is a senior consultant in health promotion at Stanford University,
where he teaches classes on spirituality and health and positive psychology.
He serves as director of the Stanford Forgiveness Projects and was co-director
of the Stanford-Northern Ireland HOPE Projects, which explored the effectiveness
of his forgiveness methods on victims of political violence. He gives lectures
and workshops on the importance, health benefits and training of forgiveness
across the country. He is the author of Forgive for Good: A Proven Prescription
for Health and Happiness, co-author of Stress Free for Good: 10 Scientifically
Proven Life Skills for Health and Happiness and author of an upcoming guide
for forgiveness for couples, Forgive for Love: The Missing Ingredient for
a Healthy and Lasting Relationship. Contact 650-208-7658, fredl@stanford.edu.
• Nancy
M. Martin is associate professor of religious studies and Griset Lecturer in
Ethics at Chapman University in Orange, Calif. A specialist in women and religion,
she co-edited Love, Sex and Gender in the World Religions and wrote the
chapter “Love” for TheOxford Handbook of Religion and Emotion.
Contact 714-997-6608, nmartin@chapman.edu.
• Samuel
P. Oliner and his wife, Pearl Oliner, founded the Altruistic
Personality and Prosocial Behavior Institute at Humboldt State University
in Arcata, Calif. A native of Poland and Holocaust survivor, Samuel Oliner,
an emeritus professor of sociology, has written extensively about altruism.
His forthcoming book is Altruism, Intergroup Apology, Forgiveness and Reconciliation;
one chapter deals with forgiveness in different religious traditions. He directs
the institute, and Pearl Oliner is research director. Its Web site offers extensive
links about altruism. Contact Samuel, 707-826-4553, spo1@axe.humbodlt.edu; Pearl, 707-826-3669,
pmo1@humboldt.edu.
• Doug
Oman is an assistant adjunct professor at the University of California,
Berkeley, School of Public Health. He has researched the health benefits of
empathy, of learning from spiritual role models and of spiritually oriented
meditation. Contact 510-643-1250, dougoman@post.harvard.edu.
• Thomas
Jay Oord is a professor of theology and philosophy at Northwest Nazarene
University in Nampa, Idaho. He serves as theologian for The Institute
for Research on Unlimited Love. He edited The Altruism Reader: Selections
From Writings on Love, Religion and Science,and he wrote Science of Love:
The Wisdom of Well-Being. Oord is an ordained minister.Contact208-467-8816, tjoord@nnu.edu.
• Dr.
V.S. Ramachandran
is a professor of psychology and neuroscience who directs the Center
for Brain and Cognition at the University of California, San Diego. Among
his research interests is the neural basis of empathy. Contact 858-534-6240.
• John
K. Roth is Edward J. Sexton Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Claremont McKenna
College in Claremont, Calif., and founding director of Claremont’s Center for
the Study of the Holocaust, Genocide and Human Rights. He is co-editor of After-Words:
Post-Holocaust Struggles with Forgiveness, Reconciliation, Justice. During
the 2007-08 academic year, he will be a visiting professor at DePauw University
in Greencastle, Ind., where he can be reached at 765-658-1041.Otherwise, contact
509-996-4585, jroth@cmc.edu.
• Ken
Sande, an attorney and engineer, is president of Peacemaker
Ministries, a nonprofit based in Billings, Mont., that helps Christians
and their churches resolve conflicts using biblical principles. He is the author
of The Peacemaker: A Biblical Guide to Resolving Personal Conflict and
co-author of Peacemaking for Families: A Biblical Guide to Managing Conflict
in Your Home. Contact 406-256-1583 ext. 106, president@peacemaker.net.
• Jeffrey
P. Schloss is a biology professor at Westmont College in Santa Barbara,
Calif. He has written about evolution and unconditional love. Contact 805-565-6118
or 805-565-6151, schloss@westmont.edu.
• Muzammil
H. Siddiqi, chairman of the Executive Council of the Shura Council of Southern
California and director of the Islamic Center of Orange County, has written
about the need for forgiveness from an Islamic perspective and led Muslim-Catholic
dialogues. Contact 714-531-1722 ext. 102.
• Mark
Lloyd Taylor is an associate professor in the School of Theology and Ministry
at Seattle University. He teaches Christian theology and wrote God Is Love:
A Study in the Theology of Karl Rahner. He is on leave during fall 2007.
Contact 206-296-5633, mltaylor@seattleu.edu.
• Carl
Thoresen is a professor emeritus of education, psychology and psychiatry/behavioral
sciences at Stanford University and senior fellow at the Spirituality and Health
Institute at Santa Clara University. His most recent book is, as co-editor,
Spirit, Science and Health: How the Spiritual Mind Fuels Physical Wellness.
Contact 408-354-5375, cthor@stanford.edu.
• Dr.
Ming
T. Tsuang is a leading researcher in human genetics, behavior and neuropsychiatric
diseases. He holds many titles: Behavioral Genomics Endowed Chair and University
Professor at the University of California; Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry
and director, Center for Behavioral Genomics, department of psychiatry at the
University of California, San Diego; and director of the Harvard Institute of
Psychiatric Epidemiology and Genetics. He has studied the role of forgiveness
and spirituality in the process of coping with combat trauma. Contact 858-534-3684,
mtsuang@ucsd.edu.