Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected pope in March 2013 with a clear agenda
of internal reform of the Vatican and the Catholic Church. Yet the
reformist Pope Francis has also developed an outspoken political agenda.
After more than six years of his pontificate, one can say that he has
become an idiosyncratic and remarkable world leader.
Among other things, he brokered an agreement between the US and Cuba;
brought South Sudan’s sworn enemies together in the Vatican, criticized
‘the globalization of indifference’ toward the plight of refugees and
migrants; made the notion of ‘periphery’ central to his geopolitical
approach; was the first Bishop of Rome to meet a Russian Patriarch of
Moscow and to visit the Arabian Peninsula; signed an unprecedented
agreement with the People’s Republic of China; and issued several
wake-up calls to Europe.
This volume collects the contributions of international experts on
different aspects of the geopolitical arena. Its aim is to provide
insights into the pope’s geopolitical approach and to help us understand
the opportunities and challenges, as well as the strengths and
weaknesses, of the Vatican’s international policy in the era of Pope
Francis.
With contributions from Sandra Arenas, Jan De Volder, Massimo Faggioli,
Brandon Gallaher, Agostino Giovagnoli, Marco Impagliazzo, Terrence
Merrigan, Stefano Picciaredda, Giuliana Rotola, Johan Verstraeten and
Jan Wouters.
Jan De Volder (ed.) is a Belgian historian with particular interest in
the roles of the Catholic Church and the world religions in
international affairs. Currently, he holds the Cusanus Chair in
‘Religion, Conflict and Peace’ of the Faculty of Theology and Religious
Studies at the KU Leuven (Belgium).