Dennis Hoover
Dr. Dennis R. Hoover is vice president for research and publications at the Institute for Global Engagement (IGE). He also directs IGE's Center on Faith & International Affairs and is the founding editor of The Review of Faith & International Affairs. Before coming to IGE, he was a resident fellow at the Leonard E. Greenberg Center for the Study of Religion in Public Life at Trinity College in Hartford, CT, and associate editor of Religion in the News magazine. He holds the degrees M.Phil. and D.Phil. in Politics from the University of Oxford, and has taught political science courses at Eastern University, Trinity College, and Berry College. Dr. Hoover is co-editor with Douglas Johnston of Religion and International Affairs: A Reader (Baylor University Press, forthcoming), and co-editor with Robert A. Seiple of Religion and Security: The New Nexus in International Relations (Rowman & Littlefield, 2004). He has published in leading scholarly journals and magazines, and serves on the editorial board for the Praeger series, "Religion, Politics, and Public Life."
Articles by Dennis Hoover
- President Obama and Religious Freedom Promotion since the Cairo Speech
- For God and Country
- Religion and the Common Weal
- Faith and the Intellectual Firmament of Foreign Affairs
- Religion and Security: The New Nexus in International Relations
- Religious Persecution as a U.S. Policy Issue
- From the Editor: Proselytism and Persecution
- From the Editor: What Does Pluralism Require of You?
- From the Editor: Toward a National Dialogue on Religion and Foreign Policy
- Introduction: IRFA, Ten Years On
- From the Editor: Evangelical Politics of the Middle East
- From the Editor: Law & Order, Religion & Order
- From the Editor: Interrogating Torture
- From the Editor: The Neo-Fundamentals
- From the Editor: Evangelicals and Muslims Together?
- From the Editor: Love Thy Neighbor
- From the Editor: Getting Religion
- The New and Not-so-new Internationalists
- Is Evangelicalism Itching for a Civilization Fight?: A Media Study
- Unrealistic Realism
