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Stephen Ames (President) is an Anglican priest and Canon of St. Paul's Cathedral. He lectures in the School of Philosophy at The University of Melbourne. |
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Wes Campbell is an ordained minister of the Uniting Church in Australia. He has studied in Perth, Melbourne and Tuebingen (Germany). He began his ministry in 1975 as a Minister in the northern housing commission suburbs of Perth. He has fulfilled a variety of roles in Melbourne including that of Executive Secretary of the Victorian Synod Division of social justice and Minister of Hotham Mission. Wes is currently chaplain at the University of Melbourne. |

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Therese D'Orsa is head of the Missiology Department at the Broken Bay Institute Sydney. She recently completed eleven years as Director of Catholic Education in the Diocese of Sale and also her term as Executive Director of the Catholic Education Commission of Victoria. She has had extensive professional involvement in the curriculum development and religious education in Catholic schools, including a special focus on justice education and mission. She is currently a professorial fellow of Australian Catholic University working across the faculties of Education and Arts at the interface of missiology and education.
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Jim D'Orsa i s deeply involved in pastoral planning in the Diocese of Sale and chairs its Diocesan Strategy Team. He is also involved with Broken Bay Institute in the areas of leadership and missiology. He has contributed strongly in the fields of educational leadership and curriculum development, as well as to institutional planning and governance. His current research concentrates on the Theology of Mission as it applies to education; analyses of secularisation/secularity and their implications for education; and issues around 'Catholic identity' in Catholic institutions.
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Rowan Ireland is an Honorary Associate in the School of Sociology at La Trobe University in Melbourne. He has had extensive field work in Latin America, and is investigating urban social movements in three Brazilian cities. He is also involved in studying the processes of secularisation and new forms of religious life and civil society in Australia.
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Robyn Reynolds OLSH Robyn’s teaching areas have been in Aboriginal languages, biblical studies, missiology, music and sacramental theology. At YTU, Robyn teaches ‘Catholic Social Teaching and Indigenous Peoples, with special reference to Aboriginal Australians’ and ‘Religious Pluralism’. She is also involved with the ‘Overseas Training Program’ and teaches ‘Christian Theology and Australian Aboriginal Religions’ at United Faculty of Theology. Special fields of interest are inter-faith and inter-cultural dialogue and encounter.
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Paul Rule taught Religious Studies and History at La Trobe University where he remains an associate, and is now engaged in major research projects on Christianity in China for the Ricci Institute, University of San Francisco and Macao Ricci Institute. He is a former member of the Australian Catholic Social Justice Council and the Melbourne Archdiocesan Justice and Peace Commission and has been involved for many years in justice and peace activities and publications. |
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