Ujamaa: Resources (Academic)
The Ujamaa Centre offers a range of resources. Many of these resources may be downloaded from our website and used by those who share our commitments.
The resources on this page are academic resources. We also offer a range of practical resources, where we reflect on the Contextual Bible methodology: see Ujamaa Resources (practical). These sets of resources belong together, for reflection on practice.
1. Other academic resources
Kumalo, S. CHURCH RESOURCE MANUAL AGAINST SEXUAL VIOLENCE&PROMOTING GENDER JUSTICE
James, G.L. Tell it like it is! The case to include the story of the rape of Tamar in children's Bibles as an awareness tool.
Kumalo, S. "THE PEOPLE SHALL GOVERN": NOW THEY HAVE ONLY THE POSSIBILITY TO VOTE
Kumalo, S. The palace, the parish and the power: Church-State relations in Rwanda and the genocide
Kumalo, S.Transforming South African Methodism: The"Journey to the New Land" Programme 1992-1997.
West, G. O. (1997). Reading on the Boundaries: reading 2 Samuel 21: 1-14 with Rizpah. Scriptura, 63, 527-537.
West, G. O. (2006a). Contextual Bible reading: a South African case study. Analecta Bruxellensia, 11, 131-148.
West, G. O., & Zondi-Mabizela, P. (2004). The Bible story that became a campaign: the Tamar Campaign in South Africa (and beyond). Ministerial Formation, 103, 4-12.
West, G. O., Zondi-Mabizela, P., Maluleke, M., Khumalo, H., Matsepe, P. S., & Naidoo, M. (2004).Rape in the House of David: the biblical story of Tamar as a resource for transformation Agenda, 61, 36-41.
West, G. O. (2007). Thabo Mbek's Bible: the role of religion in the South African public realm after liberation October, draft paper.