This article examines the question of whether civil servants have the right to wear religious dress in Canada, the United States, and Europe. It loos at different policies regarding the relationship between state neutrality and religious affairs, freedom of religion, and equality, and argues that civil servants should have the right to wear religious dress, without violating laws pertaining to neutrality
State neutrality in relation to religion is a principle of the juridical system and the political ac...
In recent years, both Germany and France have been confronted with the question of whether religious...
This article considers human rights and constitutional law issues associated with bans on expression...
This article examines the question of whether civil servants have the right to wear religious dress ...
In the burgeoning literature on law and religion, scholarly attention has tended to focus on broad q...
This article compares the recent jurisprudence of the US Supreme Court and the European Court of Hum...
After analysing the features of the duty to reasonable accommodation, applied by the Supreme Court ...
A group of Canadian scholars from a variety of disciplines (law, religious studies, philosophy, soci...
This chapter compares how the law in a range of jurisdictions respects and protects religious freedo...
Starting from framing the principle of non-discrimination and religious freedom in the EU context, t...
Contemporary democratic states tend to be highly secular, even as, in some of them, religious fundam...
This article analyses the emergence and transformation of the concept of state religious neutrality ...
The thesis of this Article is that the myth-of-neutrality argument is partially right and partially ...
Religion in general, and Islam in particular, has become one of the main focal points of policy-maki...
Religion is an important part of identity, related to the person’s values, traditions and culture. ...
State neutrality in relation to religion is a principle of the juridical system and the political ac...
In recent years, both Germany and France have been confronted with the question of whether religious...
This article considers human rights and constitutional law issues associated with bans on expression...
This article examines the question of whether civil servants have the right to wear religious dress ...
In the burgeoning literature on law and religion, scholarly attention has tended to focus on broad q...
This article compares the recent jurisprudence of the US Supreme Court and the European Court of Hum...
After analysing the features of the duty to reasonable accommodation, applied by the Supreme Court ...
A group of Canadian scholars from a variety of disciplines (law, religious studies, philosophy, soci...
This chapter compares how the law in a range of jurisdictions respects and protects religious freedo...
Starting from framing the principle of non-discrimination and religious freedom in the EU context, t...
Contemporary democratic states tend to be highly secular, even as, in some of them, religious fundam...
This article analyses the emergence and transformation of the concept of state religious neutrality ...
The thesis of this Article is that the myth-of-neutrality argument is partially right and partially ...
Religion in general, and Islam in particular, has become one of the main focal points of policy-maki...
Religion is an important part of identity, related to the person’s values, traditions and culture. ...
State neutrality in relation to religion is a principle of the juridical system and the political ac...
In recent years, both Germany and France have been confronted with the question of whether religious...
This article considers human rights and constitutional law issues associated with bans on expression...