A fascinating and enlightening contribution to the literature, this book opens up a whole new awareness of a variety of ways in which the concept of hope can be utilized as a productive tool in describing and explaining a wide range of social, religious and political situations. The contributors, mostly scholars in Australian universities, employ qualitative, quantitative and hermeneutic methods to expose new insights and a sensitivity to how hope and hopelessness has operated and continues to operate at individual, communal, societal and global levels. -- Eileen Barker, London School of Economics