Contributors

List of all the contributors and authors for Seen & Unseen.

Julia is a writer and social justice advocate. She seeks and tells stories to help understand the way the world is now and the hope of how it could be. Julia is a published poet and essayist.

Julie Canlis connects Christian spirituality with ordinary life in Wenatchee, Washington State, where she teaches Sunday School and writes.

Justine is a Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Public Christianity where she speaks and writes about reading contemporary culture.

K.-K. Yeo, a diaspora Chinese, lectures widely in majority world including China on cross-cultural understanding of civilization and religion.

Katherine Amphlett is a counsellor based in the West Midlands.

Kevin is a theologian who works for the Jesuit Centre for Faith and Justice, in Dublin. He is a Research Fellow at Dublin City University.

Dr Krish Kandiah is a social entrepreneur with a vision to help solve some of society’s seemingly intractable problems through building partnerships across civil society, faith communities, governm

Lauren Westwood writes on faith, community, and anything else that compels her to open the Notes app.

Lauren Windle is an author, journalist, presenter and public speaker. Her work has been published in Vogue, Marie Claire, Huffington Post, The Sun and Mail Online.

Laurence Fletcher is Deputy Markets News Editor at the Financial Times, and before that was Hedge Fund

Lianne Howard-Dace is a writer and trainer, with a background in church and community fundraising.

Lika Zakaryan is a writer and photographer based in the Republic of Artsakh (Karabakh).

Lukas Herren is a student of philosophy and business and works in communications in the technology industry.

Luke Bretherton is the Robert E.

Lydia Dugdale is the author of The Lost Art of Dying. She is the Dorothy L.

Mehmet Ciftci has a PhD in political theology from the University of Oxford. His research focuses on bioethics and on the interaction of religious faith with political commitments.

The Rev Canon Malcolm Rogers is Chaplain of St Andrew’s, Moscow, an Anglican church serving the international community in the Russian capital.

Mark is a research mathematician who writes on ethics, human identity and the nature of intelligence. He holds a DPhil in Mathematics from the University of Oxford.

Mark is a lecturer, a priest and a cyclist.