Editions SR

The Costa Rican Catholic Church, Social Justice, and the Rights of Workers, 1979-1996

By Dana Sawchuk
October 2004

Provides a new understanding of the relationship between Church and State in 20th-century Costa Rica.

Understanding the relationship between religion and social justice in Costa Rica involves piecing together the complex interrelationships between Church and State — between priests, popes, politics, and the people. This book does just that.

Dana Sawchuk chronicles the fortunes of the country’s two competing forms of labour organizations during the 1980s and demonstrates how different factions within the Church came to support either the union movement or Costa Rica’s home-grown Solidarity movement.

Challenging the conventional understanding of Costa Rica as a wholly peaceful and prosperous nation, and traditional interpretations of Catholic Social Teaching, this book introduces readers to a Church largely unknown outside Costa Rica. Sawchuk has carefully analyzed material from a multitude of sources — interviews, newspapers, books, and articles, as well as official Church documents, editorials, and statements by Church representativesto provide a firmly rooted socio-economic history of the experiences of workers, and the Catholic Church’s responses to workers in Costa Rica.

Buy this publication at Wilfrid Laurier University Press

Editions SR

Understanding the Consecrated Life in Canada

Critical Essays on Contemporary Trends
Edited by Jason Zuidema
December 2015
Editions SR

The New Canadian Pentecostals

By Adam Stewart
October 2015
Editions SR

Fifty Years of Religious Studies in Canada

A Personal Retrospective
By Harold Coward
December 2014