|
PERSONAL
DETAILS
Scott M.
Thomas: Senior Lecturer in International Relations and the Politics of
Developing Countries
Telephone: +44 1225 384508
Fax: +44 1225 386099
E-mail Address: S.M.Thomas@bath.ac.uk
Postal Address:
Department of European Studies and Modern Languages
University of Bath, Bath
BA2 7AY, United Kingdom |

|
PROFILE
Dr. Scott M. Thomas
lectures in International Relations and the Politics of Developing
Countries in the Department of European Studies
at the University of Bath in the United Kingdom, and is a research
fellow in the Centre for Christianity and Interreligious Dialogue,
Heythrop College, University of London.
He has a PhD and M.Sc. from the Department of International Relations
at the London School of Economics, a MA in Theology from the
New College for Advanced
Christian Studies, now part of the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley,
California, and a B.Sc. from the School of International Service
at the American University
in Washington, DC. He has taught at universities in the United States, Switzerland,
and South Africa before coming to Bath in 1994 where he is now a permanent
member of the teaching staff. Dr. Thomas' most recent book is
The Global Resurgence
of Religion and the Transformation of International Relations (PalgraveMacmillan,
2005), and he continues to write and speak widely on the role of religion and
theology in international relations today to academic organizations, such as
the International Studies Association, and to a variety of NGOs and governments,
such as the Dutch and Canadian foreign ministries, the Council on Foreign Relations
(New York), the Netherlands Chapter of the Society for International Development,
Dutch development NGOs (BBO and Cordaid), Sandhurst, the Royal Military Academy
in the United Kingdom, and the Institute for Cultural Diplomacy in Berlin,
and religious NGOs and religious organizations, including the
Pontifical Council
for Justice and Peace, the International Federation of Catholic Universities,
the Catholic International Young Leaders Network (IYLN, Blackfriars Hall, Oxford),
and the Katholiek Network (Netherlands), the Society for the Study of Christian
Ethics, the Society for the Study of Theology in the United Kingdom.
|