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  1. Hartford International University for Religion and Peace prepares leaders for our complex, pluralistic world through peacebuilding and interreligious studies programs in an interfaith environment.

  2. 27 de ene. de 2016 · The Ph.D. will continue the Seminary’s long legacy of educating experts in Christian-Muslim relations at a time when such expertise has become increasingly important. It will provide advanced study in the knowledge and practical application of Islamic Studies and Christian-Muslim relations and train scholars who will be experts in ...

  3. Hartford Seminary. Hartford International University is centered on two academic units: the Hartford Institute for Religion Research and the Duncan Black Macdonald Center for the Study of Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations, the country’s oldest center for such study, having opened in 1973.

  4. Ph.D. (Interreligious Studies) Our Ph.D. program provides advanced study of relations between religious traditions, and in Abrahamic religious studies more specifically. Our graduates have extensive research experience and the skills to teach in religious communities and academia. Learn More.

  5. At Hartford International University for Religion & Peace, you’ll join an interfaith peer group and professors who broaden your perspective and, in turn, deepen your ability to make a difference in a world where the roads no longer diverge — they come together.

  6. 15 de nov. de 2021 · Hartford Seminary has a new name. It’s now the Hartford International University for Religion and Peace. Today, we talk to its President Joel Lohr. And we hear from other faculty members about their efforts to create a more inclusive, interreligious university focusing on peace studies.

  7. The Hartford Institute was established at Hartford Seminary in 1981, formalizing a research program started by the Seminary in 1974. Its work is guided by a disciplined understanding of the interrelationship between the life and resources of American religious institutions and the possibilities and limits placed on those institutions by the