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Moral Injury Webinar Series

 

Next webinar

 

Tuesday 2 December 2025

Timothy Mallard (retired US Army Chaplain, Professor of Leadership and Ethics at Birmingham Theological Seminary, and Visiting Fellow at St Chad’s College in 2024-25) 
Moral and spiritual injury in war: Russo-Ukraine, Israel-Iran, and beyond

7pm GMT | 8pm CET | 11am PST | 2pm EST
Organised in partnership with St Chad's College

Photo of Timothy Mallard

About this session

In this webinar the Revd Colonel (retired) Timothy Mallard PhD will discuss his new book, Moral and Spiritual Injury in War: Russo-Ukraine, Israel-Iran, and Beyond (Stone Tower Press, 2025).

The work’s central theme is that moral and spiritual injury from war are no longer simply localised problems but ones which affect families, communities, forces, people groups, and nations. In essence, what we once considered to be only a tactical outcome of war (e.g., one individual suffering from moral injury and her or his treatment modality) is now additionally an operational and even strategic problem of war. From the field of ethics, specifically the Just War Tradition, this then makes these injuries ad bellum problems for consideration prior to deciding to initiate any future war, because their costs are widespread and long-lasting.

In a recent interview, Timothy said that, in writing this book, “I genuinely hope that someone living with moral and spiritual injury—whether from war or not—may read this book and gain fresh understanding and hope. As I state in the book, such suffering is never an end unto itself but rather a means to an end, particularly towards a renewed personal sense of identity, meaning, and purpose. This can be true at a communal level as well.

“Second, I do also hope that national security professionals, including warriors, policy experts, and decision-makers, will gain a new appreciation for the social costs of these injuries as an outcome of war. For that class of leaders, I genuinely hope to catalyse a different way of thinking about war, particularly a consideration of its costs.”

Do join us to find out more. Timothy will be in discussion with Brian Powers, Executive Director of the International Centre of Moral Injury (ICMI) at Durham University. This webinar is organised by the ICMI and St Chad’s College, Durham.

About Timothy

Timothy recently retired after almost 37 years as a United States Army Chaplain. During that time he deployed as a Battalion, Brigade, and Division Chaplain in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Afghanistan, and Iraq, held strategic postings at both US Army Europe and Africa and the Pentagon and was a certified Army Strategist.

As an experienced chaplain, a Christian ethicist, and Assistant Professor and Director of Ethical Development at the US Army War College, Timothy was a founding member of the ICMI’s steering group and in September 2024 we were very happy to welcome him to Durham for a 12-month visiting fellowship with St Chad's College. He is now is a Professor of Leadership and Ethics at Birmingham Theological Seminary in the USA and continues as an Honorary Fellow in Durham University’s Department of Theology and Religion.

Join us

All are welcome to attend. To receive the Teams link, please register for free at Eventbrite.

 

Videos from previous webinars

Please note that only the talks are recorded. Webinars include around 45 minutes audience discussion that is not recorded.

Shannon Allen's and Aaron Fuller's recent presentations will appear here shortly.

Tony Wright: Debating history, healing the present: Forward Assist's debating society and moral injury

Kevin Denholm: Moral injury and pathways to healing in the film industry

Rachel Kanter: Moral injury in civilian intimate partner violence contexts

Assala Khettache: The weaponisation of collective moral injuries in Africa

Creative approaches to recovery and repair after moral injury: Life story theatre and collective narratives. By Alison O'Connor

Penance in light of moral injury - by Brian Powers

Andrea Lambell: How moral injury due to PPE and distancing changed England's care landscape

Recovery from moral injury in parents whose children have experienced childhood maltreatment - by Dr Cher McGillivray

Moral issues in care towards the end of life - a presentation by Dr Colette Hawkins

Moral injury and church-related abuse: Responding creatively through the visual arts, music and poetry

Video of webinar on moral injury in film and television

The radicality of listening to stories: How to listen to a war story, by Joshua T. Morris

Moral injury and families, by Leo Quinlan, Marty O'Connor and Michael Lyons

Sara de Jong: From moral injury to moral redemption? Afghanistan veterans’ advocacy on behalf of Afghan interpreters

Nicola Frail: A chaplaincy reflection on the potential for military moral injury from non-combat experiences

Unbinding Souls: The Use of Ritual in Moral Injury, by Rita Nakashima Brock

Beyond the Binary of 'Victims' and 'Perpetrators': A Revised Typology for Moral Injury Based on Agency, by Brian Powers

Sharing lament and reinvesting in hope when loved ones die by suicide, by Carrie Doehring

Moral Injury as Negative Revelation, by Michael S. Yandell

The Power of Religious Rituals in Supporting People with Moral Injury, by Brad Kelle and Chris Tidd

Trajectories of moral injury: A webinar introducing the International Centre for Moral Injury