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Tuesday, September 07, 2010
      

Center Leadership

David B. House, Ph.D.
Executive Director
______________________

Fellows

Very Rev. Richard Duffield, Cong. Orat., M.A. (Oxon)
John Henry Newman Distinguished Fellow

Anne B. Hendershott, Ph.D.
Pope John Paul II Fellow in Student Development

Kimberly C. Shankman, Ph.D.
St. Thomas Aquinas Fellow in Academic Affairs

Rev. D. Paul Sullins, Ph.D.
St. Ignatius of Loyola Fellow in Catholic Identity
______________________

Ecclesiastical Advisor

Most Rev. Raymond L. Burke, D.D., J.C.D.
Prefect, Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura
______________________

Center Advisory Board

John P. Hittinger, Ph.D.
Professor of Philosophy, Center for Thomistic Studies, University of St. Thomas (Houston)

 Rev. Leonard A. Kennedy, C.S.B., Ph.D.

Former President, Assumption College of the University of Windsor, and St. Thomas More College of the University of Saskatchewan, Canada

Rev. Joseph W. Koterski, S.J., S.T.L., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University

Rev. Msgr. Stuart W.
Swetland, S.T.D.

Vice President for Catholic Identity and Mission,
Mount St. Mary’s University

Hon. Kenneth D. Whitehead, Ph.D.
Former Assistant Secretary for Postsecondary Education, U.S. Department of Education; author

 


Summer Institute of Catholic Social Thought

Announcing the
Summer Institute
of
Catholic Social Thought


June 1-5, 2009

A Joint Project of

The Society of Catholic Social Scientists
and
The Center for the Study of
Catholic Higher Education


"When it comes to the intellectual life of the university,  the lamp of Catholic thought is hidden under a bushel. . .in public discussion and debate it is rare to find a Catholic professor addressing the issues in a distinctively Catholic way.”  Although this assessment, by Robert Wilken, refers to non-Catholic institutions, the same could also be said of most nominally Catholic institutions, which remain effectively secularized at the level of academic discourse.

The aim of the Summer Catholic Social Thought (CST) Institute, conducted by the Society of Catholic Social Scientists (SCSS) and The Center for the Study of Catholic Higher Education of the Cardinal Newman Society (non-profit, tax-exempt Catholic scholarly and professional organizations) is to provide Catholic faculty and graduate students in the social sciences and related disciplines a basic grounding and application of Catholic social thought in order to help them to incorporate the academic social sciences into a Catholic worldview.  To this end, the Summer CST Institute provides an intensive, stimulating and practical weeklong introduction to Catholic Social Thought, emphasizing both theory and application to specific academic disciplines in the arts and human sciences.  As in the sample of statements above from participant evaluations, participating faculty attest that the Summer CST Institute has been highly successful in achieving this aim, and in providing unique value for their careers in both teaching and research.

The week (Monday through Friday) is organized around four 90-minute sessions a day. Each session is about half lecture and half discussion. In a typical week:

MONDAY'S four sessions are devoted to thematic and historical overviews of CST, including the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church and Ex Corde Ecclesiae.
TUESDAY deals with the history, development and exemplars of Catholic social science.
The remainder of the week is devoted to applications to specific social science content areas, each taught by an expert in the respective discipline.
WEDNESDAY: Psychology, Political Science and Law.
THURSDAYHistory, Sociology and Anthropology.
FRIDAY: Economics and Business; closing session, certificates.
 
The Institute venue is a short walk from the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, the John Paul II Cultural Center , and over 50 Catholic religious houses, shrines, institutes and apostolates.  Numerous apostolates and agencies related to Catholic social justice issues in Washington , D.C. are a short subway trip away. Participants may also participate in daily Mass at the National Shrine or Lauds or Matins at one of several nearby Franciscan or Dominican monasteries.

The 2009 Summer Institute is directed by the Rev. Dr. Paul Sullins, Professor of Sociology at The Catholic University of America, and editor of Catholic Social Thought: American Responses to the Compendium (Rowman and Littlefield 2008). The 2009 tuition fee for an individual participant in the weeklong Summer Institute is $600.  An institution may sponsor up to two individuals for $1,000.   These fees are subsidized through generous donations to this project, and do not represent the full cost of producing the week-long Summer Institute.  A limited number of scholarships are available for individual enrollees as needed.

For more information or with questions, contact us at Summer Institute of Catholic Social Teaching, Aquinas Hall 116, Catholic University of America, Washington, DC  20064; phone (202) 319-5445; or email to sullins@cua.edu.

THE 2009 SUMMER INSTITUTE WILL BE HELD JUNE 1-5 ON THE CAMPUS OF THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA IN WASHINGTON, D.C.

Space is limited.  Qualified applicants enrolled in the order application received.

Program Brochure ().

Enrollment Application (Individual) ().

Enrollment Application (Sponsoring Institution) ().

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