In September 2018, the majority Buddhist government of Sri Lanka approved draft legislation banning animal sacrifice at Hindu Temples. The Cabinet referred to these sacrifices as a “primitive” practice that can cause physical and mental harm to society. Similarly, the Federal Supreme Court of Brazil is presently evaluating the constitutionality of a proposed bill banning animal sacrifice in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. Proponents of this bill argue that animal rights supersede the religious freedom of the adherents of Afro-Brazilian faiths who perform these sacrifices. They further contend that the practice of animal sacrifice poses a threat to public health. Through the evaluation of these cases, this article will consider t...
This article has as main objective to point a way to solve the conflicts between the fundamental rig...
While religious slaughter is not a new practice in Australia, it has recently attracted public conce...
In this chapter, a reprinted article from Southern African Public Law (2010), I argue that, even sup...
The paper analyses a controversy in Rio Grande do Sul, involving the local Afro-religious community,...
Um enfrentamento polêmico envolvendo a liberdade religiosa, protegida de forma ampla pela Constituiç...
This article deals with ritual slaughter and the consequences of a possible ban on un-stunned slaugh...
Background: The practice of sacrifice has occurred in several cultures and religions throughout hist...
Two votes given in Extraordinary Appeal 494,601, whose judgment is pending in the Federal Supreme Co...
Este artigo analisa algumas questões muito controversas relacionadas com a liberdade de religião, de...
In February 2019, The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) and the British...
A critique of the Supreme Court’s controversial Lukumi case which upheld religious sacrifice of anim...
Each year in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, a ceremony is held by the Zulu people in honour of the “fi...
In a recent two-part article in this journal, the authors of this note analysed the controversy surr...
Each year in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, a ceremony is held by the Zulu people in honour of the “fi...
According to traditional Jewish and Islamic law, animals must be slaughtered by a single cut to the ...
This article has as main objective to point a way to solve the conflicts between the fundamental rig...
While religious slaughter is not a new practice in Australia, it has recently attracted public conce...
In this chapter, a reprinted article from Southern African Public Law (2010), I argue that, even sup...
The paper analyses a controversy in Rio Grande do Sul, involving the local Afro-religious community,...
Um enfrentamento polêmico envolvendo a liberdade religiosa, protegida de forma ampla pela Constituiç...
This article deals with ritual slaughter and the consequences of a possible ban on un-stunned slaugh...
Background: The practice of sacrifice has occurred in several cultures and religions throughout hist...
Two votes given in Extraordinary Appeal 494,601, whose judgment is pending in the Federal Supreme Co...
Este artigo analisa algumas questões muito controversas relacionadas com a liberdade de religião, de...
In February 2019, The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) and the British...
A critique of the Supreme Court’s controversial Lukumi case which upheld religious sacrifice of anim...
Each year in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, a ceremony is held by the Zulu people in honour of the “fi...
In a recent two-part article in this journal, the authors of this note analysed the controversy surr...
Each year in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, a ceremony is held by the Zulu people in honour of the “fi...
According to traditional Jewish and Islamic law, animals must be slaughtered by a single cut to the ...
This article has as main objective to point a way to solve the conflicts between the fundamental rig...
While religious slaughter is not a new practice in Australia, it has recently attracted public conce...
In this chapter, a reprinted article from Southern African Public Law (2010), I argue that, even sup...