Abstract
Klaus Koschorke and others from the so-called Munich School have added an important corrective to the study of World Christianity. With an emphasis on “South to South” connections, an insistence on “polycentric” origins, and an ever-present awareness of transcontinental cooperation in Christian missions, this school of thought is an extremely helpful and thought-provoking approach to World Christian studies that many in the English-speaking West are only recently learning about. Koschorke’s latest two books break new ground in the field and should be on the radar of all scholars of World Christianity.
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