Studies in Anabaptist Theology and Ethics
Published in partnership with T&T Clark, is dedicated to displaying the vibrant global resurgence of theological reflection and praxis in and adjacent to the Anabaptist tradition. In a world that is fraught with overt and covert forms of violence, this series provides a platform for global voices to contribute new ways of seeing, understanding, and living what it means to love one鈥檚 enemy and one鈥檚 neighbor with the peace of God that surpasses much of the wisdom of the day.
Anabaptism emerged as a Christian movement in sixteenth-century Europe, but today its heirs鈥攚hether called Mennonite, Brethren, Quaker, Amish, neo-Anabaptist, or any number of other designations鈥攁re scattered around the world, and especially the global South. Therefore, while recognizing that the preponderance of academic theology in the peace church tradition still occurs in North America and Europe, this series is committed to publishing voices that represent the theological imaginations, concerns, heartbreaks, and convictions of the entire global family. To that end, volumes will draw from established and emerging voices and take a variety of forms, including but not limited to monographs, case studies, and edited collections.
To learn more about the series, see . To purchase copies, visit the . Proposals or inquiries can be sent to ims@ambs.edu.
Series editors

Books in the series
Vol. 4:
by Jamie Pitts
Vol. 3:
by Layton Boyd Friesen
Vol. 2:
edited by Darryl W. Stephens, Elizabeth Soto Albrecht
Vol. 1:
edited by Laura Schmidt Roberts, Paul Martens, and Myron A. Penner
The Mennonite Scholars and Friends 2020 Forum featured a roundtable discussion on Recovering from the Anabaptist Vision with the editors and authors.