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Liberation Theology and Praxis in Contemporary Latin America: Copyright

Liberation Theology and Praxis in Contemporary Latin America
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table of contents
  1. Title Page
  2. Copyright
  3. Contents
  4. Notes on contributors
  5. Foreword: Theology in the footsteps of the martyrs
    1. The legacy of the martyrs commits us
    2. The risk of squandering this legacy
    3. The method of doing theology in the footsteps of the martyrs
    4. To conclude
    5. Notes
    6. References
  6. Acknowledgements
  7. Introduction: As it was in the beginning?
    1. Notes
    2. References
  8. 1. Conflict and ecclesiology: Obedience, institutionality and people of God in the Movement of Priests for the Third World
    1. Conflict and privilege
    2. Verticality and horizontality
    3. Containment and transgression
    4. Fragmentation
    5. Conclusion
    6. Notes
    7. References
  9. 2. Legacies of the ‘bridge man’: Catholic accompaniment, inter-class relations and the classification of surplus in Montevideo
    1. Those who come bearing gifts
    2. Roots of Catholic confluence in the Cruz
    3. Acompañamiento amid structural sin: between reciprocity and unconditional charity
    4. Bridges, networks and the (in)dignity of waste
    5. Conclusion
    6. Notes
    7. References
  10. 3. Orlando Fals Borda’s participatory action research: At and beyond the crossroads of Camilo Torres’s neo-socialism and liberation theology
    1. From critique of violence to rebellious social science
    2. Camilo Torres’s pluralism and the liberation social science tradition
    3. Engaged research and the theological question of social ethics
    4. In search of a methodological approach to Praxis
    5. PAR and liberation theology: epistemological differences and common challenges
    6. Notes
    7. References
  11. 4. The impact of liberation theology in the Latin American built environment
    1. Participatory processes rising in the 1960s
    2. Abstraction as a tool for privilege
    3. Participatory processes in Latin American architecture
    4. Liberation theology and Paulo Freire as antidotes to abstraction
    5. Colectivos and the heritage of liberation theology
    6. Notes
    7. References
  12. 5. When liberation theology met human rights
    1. Introduction
    2. Brazil’s liberation theology and transnational human rights
    3. Developing the rights of the poor
    4. Friends and networks of the liberationist mission
    5. The incidental exile of liberation theology
    6. Dom Hélder Câmara’s European tour
    7. Conclusion
    8. Notes
    9. References
  13. 6. ‘Women, the key to liberation?’: A feminist theology of liberation at the Catholic women’s conference at Puebla
    1. Introduction
    2. Literature review
    3. Background
    4. The Latin American woman as subject
    5. Population politics, the pill and the future of liberation
    6. Conclusion
    7. Notes
    8. References
  14. 7. Towards the possibility of an ecofeminist political theology: The case of the Con-spirando collective
    1. Women’s bodies and Radical Evil
    2. Ecofeminist answers to a post-secular world
    3. The case of the Con-spirando collective: an ecofeminist alternative in a post-secular world
    4. Final reflections
    5. Notes
    6. References
  15. Afterword. Contemporary witnesses to life and liberation: The persistent and evolving reality of Latin American martyrdom
    1. Latin American martyrdom: as it was in the beginning?
    2. The persistence of Latin American martyrdom: from origins to contemporary reality
    3. The theological challenge of contemporary martyrdom
    4. Creative synchronicity with the ‘living martyrs’ of today
    5. Notes
    6. References
  16. Index

Available to purchase in print or download for free at https://uolpress.co.uk

First published 2025 by

University of London Press

Senate House, Malet St, London WC1E 7HU

© the Authors 2025

The rights of Pablo Bradbury and Niall H. D. Geraghty to be identified as authors of this Work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

This book is published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license.

Any third-party material reproduced in the book is not covered by the book’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in the image or text’s credit line. To reuse third-party material not published under the same licence as the book you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holder.

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from The British Library.

ISBN 978-1-915249-59-3 (hardback)

ISBN 978-1-915249-61-6 (paperback)

ISBN 978-1-915249-64-7 (.epub)

ISBN 978-1-915249-63-0 (.pdf)

ISBN 978-1-915249-62-3 (.html)

DOI https://doi.org/10.14296/hflc8361

Cover image: Pablo Roberto Suárez, Martirologio y gloria de los santos anónimos. Photography by Viviana Gil courtesy of the Museo de Arte Moderno de Buenos Aires (Buenos Aires Museum of Modern Art).

Cover design for University of London Press by Hayley Warnham.

Book design by Nigel French.

Text set by Westchester Publishing Services UK in Meta Serif and Meta, designed by Erik Spiekermann.

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