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The
co-directors of the Ethics/Religion and Society Program
are Dr. Elizabeth Groppe and Dr. Kathleen Smythe who
were appointed in June, 2007.
Dr. Elizabeth Groppe
(Associate Professor of Theology)
Elizabeth Groppe specializes in Catholic systematic
theology. Her areas of teaching and research interest
include trinitarian theology, theology and ecology,
and interreligious dialogue.
Dr. Kathleen Smythe
(Associate Professor of History)
Kathleen Smythe teaches introductory African history
in addition to a wide variety of upper-level courses
including: African Women, History of South Africa, the
U.S. and Liberia, History without Documents, and Africa
Since 1945. Her first book “Fipa Families: Catholic
Evangelization and Social Reproduction in Nkansi, Ufipa,
1880-1960” was published in May 2006 by Heinemann
in their Social History of Africa series. This work
and a series of articles related to it focused on socioeconomic
changes of the colonial period, with a particular interest
in the relationships Catholic missionaries and Fipa
families forged. An article on the relative opportunities
available to African and European women at a remote
African mission station at the turn of the century entitled,
“African Women and White Sisters at Karema Mission
Station, 1894-1920” was published in the Journal
of Women’s History in summer 2007.
Of late, she is engaged in teaching and research that
examines the role of global processes in African history,
particularly development aid. She is also engaged in
service learning and was the trip leader for the Academic
Service Learning Semester in Ghana in the spring of
2006. In the past, her introductory history courses
have involved a service learning component that allowed
students to learn from Africans living in Cincinnati
about their cultures and places in the global economy.
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