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Populists or Internationalists? Evangelical Responses to Globalization

Many evangelicals in the United States are populists with a nationalist streak – a fact on clear display in the 2016 election. Yet many evangelicals are also “new internationalists” with deep concerns over religious persecution across the world, humanitarian aid in developing countries, immigration as a form of hospitality, and global health. How can these starkly different characteristics describe the same group?

This three-year project brings together an impressive group of scholars to explore this apparent tension. Despite a great deal of recent scholarly and popular discussion about evangelicalism, we know surprisingly little about how populism and internationalism co-exist within the tradition. Too often this lack of nuanced and fine-grained understanding generates simplistic paradigms and misleading characterizations. We hope to clarify and deepen assumptions about evangelical international engagement at this particularly important moment of normative debate over the political role of evangelicals – a debate that often focuses on domestic policy and politics and neglects the complexity of faith in international affairs.

The Institute for Global Engagement’scommitted an entire edition to this project in late 2019. In the spring of 2019, the Center for Public Justice’s included numerous articles reporting on the findings of the projectand two panels presenting the researchers' work were presented at the biennial Henry Institute Symposium on Religion and Public Life.

TheHenry Symposium on Religion and Public Life

The Symposium, an international conference held on April 25-27, 2019, featured two panels by the research partners, presenting their work as part of the 3-day event including presentations by political scientists, sociologists, and historians.

Session I

“A Just and Durable Peace: American Evangelicals and the Quest for Peace after WWII
Robert J. Joustra, Redeemer University College

“Populist Internationalism: Religious Freedom and the Politics of Persecution”
Melani McAlister, George Washington University

“The Global – and Globalist – Roots of Evangelical Action”
Paul S. Rowe, Trinity Western University

Session II

“Missions Has Come Home:How Evangelicals' Refugee Work Complicates the Populism-Internationalism Binary"
Melissa Borja, University of Michigan

"Are Evangelicals Populists? The View from the 2016 American National Election Study"
James Guth, Furman University

"Populism, Evangelicalism, and the Polarized Politics of Immigration"
Ruth Melkonian-Hoover, Gordon College
Lyman Kellstedt, Wheaton College

“ ‘Rescue Sells:’ Narrating Human Trafficking to Evangelical Populists”
David Swartz, Asbury University

Public Justice Review

Public Justice Review is the journal of the Center for Public Justice, an independent, nonpartisan, Christian think-tank devoted topolicy researchandcivic education. Volume 9, Issue 2 (2019) of Public Justice Review was devoted entirely to the project theme. The issue was titled “Populists or Internationalists? Globalization and Evangelical Tribes” and contained the following six essays:

Kevin R. den Dulk (ϲʿ¼)

Robert J. Joustra (Redeemer University College)

Jessica Robertson Wright (Center for Public Justice)

Marc LiVecche (McDonald Scholar, Oxford University)

Paul S. Rowe (Trinity Western University)

Ruth Melkonian-Hoover (Gordon College)

The Review of Faith & International Affairs

The Review of Faith & International Affairs is published quarterly by Routledge (Taylor & Francis). Evangelicals: Populists or Internationalists?” comprised all ofVolume 17, Number 3 (Fall 2019) as a theme issue devoted entirely to the project and included revised versions of papers originally presented at the April 2019 Henry Symposium on Religion and Public Life, along with one separately commissioned article by Jessica Joustra (professor of Reformed Ethics at Redeemer University College).

Dennis R. Hoover (Editor, The Review of Faith & International Affairs)

Jessica Joustra (Redeemer University College)

James L. Guth (Furman University)

Paul S. Rowe (Trinity Western University)

Ruth Melkonian-Hoover (Gordon College) and Lyman A. Kellstedt (Wheaton College)

Robert J. Joustra (Redeemer University College)

Melissa Borja and Jacob Gibson (University of Michigan)

'

David R. Swartz (Asbury University)

Melani McAlister (George Washington University)

Research Partners

Project Leaders

  • Kevin den Dulk, Henry Institute Director, CalvinUniversityPolitical Science Department
  • , Redeemer University College Politics and International Studies Department
  • , Institute for Global Engagement

Contributors

  • , University of Michigan
  • , Furman University Politics and International Affairs Department
  • , Wheaton College, Political Science (Emeritus)
  • , Providence: A Journal of Christianity & American Foreign Policy
  • , George Washington University Department of American Studies
  • , Gordon College Political Science Department
  • , Trinity Western University Political and International Studies
  • , Asbury University

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