Following the success of the last webinar, which marked the 40th anniversary of the foundation of Solidarnosc – the first independent trade union in the Soviet bloc, which led to the collapse of communism and a peaceful transition to democracy across Central and Eastern Europe, we are launching Re-thinking Solidarity series. Re-thinking Solidarity will bring together leading academics, historians, philosophers, theologians, social activists, policymakers, and legislators to engage in thoughtful reflection and re-think what solidarity means today, in light of a variety of societal changes, the current geopolitical situation an,d the consequences of COVID-19 pandemic. We will explore the idea of solidarity in the context of religion and inter-faith dialogue; environmental and financial sustainability; politics and political psychology; and equality and social justice. Solidarity, religion, and inter-faith dialogue speakers:
Lord Alderdice (chair)
Dariusz Karlowicz, Political Theology
Daniel Greenberg, Jewish Law and Ethics
Nazila Ghanea, University of Oxford
Jaroslaw Kupczak OP, St. John Paul II Institute of Culture, Angelicum
Re-thinking Solidarity is organized by the Centre for Democracy and Peace Building, the periodical, Political Theology, in partnership with St. Benet’s Institute, St. Benet’s Hall, University of Oxford, and The St. John Paul II Institute of Culture at the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas - the Angelicum in Rome, supported by the Polish Cultural Institute (London).