Australian political scientist, Robert Wolfgramm, argues for the legitimacy of a Christian political party in Fiji, contending that it represents an advance over class- and race-based parties.
Founder of the new SDL party in Fiji, Laisenia Qarase, argues that his brand of Christian democracy will unite Fijians for the public good of all.
The upcoming debate in the Senate over the faith-based initiative will be caught in a web of First Amendment misinterpretations and historical confusions. It will take a miracle for Congress and President Bush to get this one right.
Adele Hutton Auxier explains the impressive 8-1 decision of Canada’s Supreme Court on May 17 that upheld the right of Trinity Western University (British Columbia) to keep its Christian behavioral standards for its teacher-education program.
With its May decision to grant a tax credit to parents who pay school tuition, Ontario’s government moves ahead of American states in recognizing the importance of parental choice in education.
John Bosma contends that the American-Soviet nuclear arms spiral upward to mutually assured destruction (MAD) endorsed the most heinous war crimes. Non-nuclear ballistic missile defense is an essential response to the demands of justice.
The editor reflects on 25 years of the Public Justice Report and the Center for Public Justice.
The response to this tragedy must be one of justice that leads to justice. Now is the time for careful reflection and wise judgment about everything that led to and should flow from the horrible acts of terrorism.