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Emilce Cuda
People and Politics panel Oct 2015
Office Head of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America (Roman Curia)
Assumed Role
15 July 2021
Personal details
BornDecember 26, 1965
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Alma materPontifical Catholic University of Argentina
OccupationTheologian

Emilce Cuda is an Argentine Roman Catholic social moral theologian, university professor and Roman Curia official.

Dubbed “the woman who knows how to read Pope Francis”,[1] she is known for interpreting the teachings of Pope Francis through the Argentine Theology of the People,[2] political philosophers, and her own native exposure to Pope Francis’ cultural milieu.

She is the first Argentine lay woman to receive a pontifical PhD/STD in moral theology, her diploma signed by the future Pope Francis in his capacity as the Grand Chancellor of the Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina.[3]

She is Office Head of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America since her appointment by Pope Francis on 19 July 2021, reporting to the Commission's president Cardinal Marc Ouellet.

Education

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She obtained her BA (1990), MA (2005) and PhD/STD (2010) from the Pontificia Universidad Católica Argentina, UCA. She studied philosophy at Universidad de Buenos Aires, UBA. She received an MBA (2001) from the Universidad de Ciencias Empresariales y Sociales.

Work

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She collaborated closely with her two principal referents, Juan Carlos Scannone SJ and Ernesto Laclau. She traveled extensively in joint speaking tours with Scannone throughout Latin America, the United States, Europe and China. She joined Laclau at Northwestern University in 2016 to examine populism.

She is a research professor at Universidad Nacional Arturo Juaretche (UNAJ) as well as visiting professor at the UCA, the UBA and the University of St. Thomas (Texas). She was a visiting researcher professor in residence at Boston College (2016)[4] and DePaul University (2019).[5] She is an advisor and professor at the Episcopal Conference of Latin America (CELAM) for its social school CEBITPAL,[6] She collaborates with the Holy See's Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, the International Catholic Migration Commission of Geneva in el program "The Future of Work. Labor after Laudato Si y Post Covid 19, with the Economy of Francis", with the Argentine Episcopal Conference [7] , and with the Pastoral Juvenil de la Arquidiócesis de Los Angeles. She is a visible figure in academic, ecclesiastical and social organizations in Argentina and Latin America. She is a member of the international network Catholic Theological Ethics in the World Church (CTEWC)[8], having coordinated the Latin America and Caribbean section from 2016-2018.

She appears frequently at conferences and on-line panel discussions, speaking chiefly on labor issues and the economy of Francis[9][10][11]. Her approach draws on the social Papal encyclicals, Catholic cultural and intellectual history in Latin America, and Argentine elements such as Peronism and tango lyrics.

Her formulation ‘pueblo-pobre-trabajador’ does not render directly into English, in which people and poor are not the connotative singular nouns that they are in Spanish.[12] Resonating with Pope Francis’s phrase “God’s holy faithful people”[13] and the preferential option for the poor of Catholic social teaching, Cuda’s phrase suggests that the poor, destitute as they may be, are the workers who make up the people on whom God’s favor rests.

On July 19, 2021 Pope Francis appointed her as Office Head of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America.

Para Leer a Francisco - Reading Francis

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Her book Reading Francis – Theology, Ethics and Politics (Spanish: Para Leer a Francisco – Teologia, Etica y Politica) was published in 2014. Prefaced by Scannone, it examines the theological and philosophical underpinnings of Pope Francis’ writings. Spanish newspaper ABC wrote, "It allows us to delve into the main lines of Theology of the People, covering the pastoral and ethical implications of the decisions approved by the Latin American episcopate held in Aparecida."[14]

Books published

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  • Democracia y Catolicismo en Estados Unidos: 1792-1945. Democracy and Catholicism in the United States. (ISBN 978-9876401173) PhD thesis. 2010. In Spanish.
  • Democracia en el Magisterio Pontificio. Democracy in the Pontifical Magisterium. (ISBN 978-9876403139) Masters thesis. 2014. In Spanish.
  • Para leer a Francisco. Teología, ética y política. Reading Francis. (ISBN 978-9875002180) 2016. In Spanish. Translated into Italian in 2018.
  • Nuevos Estilos Sindicales en América Latina y el Caribe. (Editor). New Styles of Labor Unions in Latin America. (ISBN 978-987-722-227-2). 2016. In Spanish.
  • Hacia una ética de la participación y la esperanza. (Editor) Toward an Ethic of Participation and Hope. Prologue by James Keenan SJ. (ISBN 978-958-781-056-1). 2017 In Spanish.

References

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  1. ^ Ivereigh, Austin. "The Woman Who Knows How to Read Pope Francis". Crux.
  2. ^ Borghesi, Massimo. "Emilce Cuda, teologa e filosofa, legge l'opera di Alberto Methol Ferré". Massimoborghesi.com (in Italian).
  3. ^ Hall, Kevin. "Bergoglio's elevation to Pope Francis recalls his deep role in Argentina's politics". McClatchy Newspapers. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
  4. ^ "Boston College Jesuit Institute Visiting Fellows". Boston College.
  5. ^ "Center for World Catholicism Cultural Theology Research Fellows" (PDF). DePaul University.
  6. ^ Calderón Gómez, Paola. ""Un plan para resucitar ante el COVID-19" de CEBITEPAL". Celam (in Spanish).
  7. ^ "Ojea cerró un seminario sobre el pensamiento social de Francisco en la Universidad de San Isidro". Que Pasa Web (in Spanish).
  8. ^ McElwee, Joshua. "Francis talks feminism with global moral theologian network". National Catholic Reporter.
  9. ^ Salgado, Soli. "At inaugural conference, Spanish-speaking scholars focus on globalization, exclusion". National Catholic Reporter.
  10. ^ "Conferencias de Emilce Cuda en Facultad de Ciencias Sociales". Universidad de la República Uruguay (in Spanish).
  11. ^ "Speakers for RECongress 2020". Los Angeles Religious Education Congress.
  12. ^ San Martin, Ines. "Pope's late teacher says his concept of 'People' just doesn't work in English".
  13. ^ Ivereigh, Austen (2017). The Great Reformer. Henry Holt and Company. p. 111. ISBN 9781627791571.
  14. ^ Louzao Villar, Joseba. "Francisco y Benedicto XVI, dos modelos para una Iglesia". ABC Cultural (in Spanish).
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Julio César Caballero
Office Head of the Pontifical Commission for Latin America
15 July 2021 – Incumbent



Category:1965 births Category:Living people Category:Argentine theologians Category:Argentine Roman Catholic theologians Category:Argentine Roman Catholics Category:21st-century Argentine women writers Category:Writers from Buenos Aires Category:Argentine non-fiction writers Category:Women Christian theologians