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Advocacy

Joseph Camilleri has been actively involved in the Pax Christi movement since 1969. He served as General Secretary of Pax Christi in England in 1970-72, facilitated the establishment of Pax Christi in the United States, and was the founding President of Pax Christi in Australia from 1974, a position he held for over 30 years. He continues to serve on the Executive Committee of the Victorian branch.

Project
24 September 2003 to 27 July 2010

A series of 10-week and 6-week courses offered each year with the aim of developing  better community understanding of the dynamics of a rapidly globalising world and Australia's place in it. 

Each year the course attracted between 35 and 70 participants, most of them working in education, government, the professions, media,  and religious and community organisations, as well as a number of students.

Conference
16 April 2008

Title of presentation 

The Mounting Costs of Empire – The Iraq War 

The 2-day Conference was held on 15-16 April 2007 at Customs House, Sydney

Project
12 April 2009 to 8 May 2009

Between 12 April and 8 May 2009, Joseph Camilleri led a Centre for dialogue delegation to  the Middle East. The other two members were Research Fellows, Dr Michális S. Michael and Dr Luca Anceschi.

Event
6 April 2010

Worlds in Transition by Joseph A. Camilleri and Jim Falk was launched on 13 April 2010 by The Hon Michael Kirby, former Justice off the High Court of Australia, Professor Stuart Macintyre (University of Melbourne) and Professor Dennis Altman (La Trobe University).

Conference
28 September 2015

Professor Camilleri presented a paper at the Symposium on 'Ecology and Peace: Responding to the Ethos of Domination'. The symposium was held at Trinity College, University of Melbourne.

Conference
5 February 2016 to 8 February 2016

A paper presented at the Conference

Warrior and Pacifist Traditions in the Three Abrahamic Religions and Buddhism

convened by National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, University of Otago, and Toda Institute for Global Peace and Policy Research (Tokyo).

Abstract

The paper argues that we need to move beyond the sterile disputes of the past when it comes to the interpretations of sacred texts.

Conference
23 July 2018

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