The European Court of Human Rights has just upheld Italy’s policy of displaying crucifixes in its public school classrooms. In Lautsi v. Italy, an atheistic mother of two public school children challenged this policy, in place since 1924. After losing in the Italian courts, she appealed to the European Court of Human Rights, arguing that the presence of these crucifixes in public schools violated her and her children’s rights to religious freedom and to a secular education guaranteed by the European Convention on Human Rights. On November 3, 2009, an unanimous seven-judge chamber of the European Court held for Ms. Lautsi. On March 18, 2011, the Grand Chamber reversed, and held 15-2 in favor of Italy
The article offers a socio-legal analysis of the recent case on freedom of/from religion in Italy, t...
2009 brought an existential crisis to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In November, it un...
The article offers a socio-legal analysis of the recent case on freedom of/from religion in Italy, t...
This Article shows that the European Court of Human Rights case of Lautsi v. Italy, upholding the di...
On 3rd November 2009 the European Court of Human Rights in Strasburg ruled that Italy had to remove ...
In the case Lautsi v. Italy, the European Court of Human Rights ruled twice on the validity of the p...
A comparative anthropologist could not have asked for a better script: two high profile cases, one b...
Increased immigration throughout Europe and expanding religious pluralism have exerted pressure on E...
In the case Lautsi v. Italy, the European Court of Human Rights ruled twice on the validity of the p...
Increasingly, courts across Europe are passing judgement on issues of religion and education, but th...
The case of Lautsi v. Italy, better known as the “Crucifix Case,” is a particularly significant case...
The recent Lautsi case and the numerous decisions that were delivered both in Italy and by the Europ...
In November 2009 the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg ruled that crosses displayed in cl...
none1noIn the first part, the article focuses on the debate that has developed in Italy as regards t...
In Italy, unlike in most European countries, the debate over religious symbols in the public schools...
The article offers a socio-legal analysis of the recent case on freedom of/from religion in Italy, t...
2009 brought an existential crisis to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In November, it un...
The article offers a socio-legal analysis of the recent case on freedom of/from religion in Italy, t...
This Article shows that the European Court of Human Rights case of Lautsi v. Italy, upholding the di...
On 3rd November 2009 the European Court of Human Rights in Strasburg ruled that Italy had to remove ...
In the case Lautsi v. Italy, the European Court of Human Rights ruled twice on the validity of the p...
A comparative anthropologist could not have asked for a better script: two high profile cases, one b...
Increased immigration throughout Europe and expanding religious pluralism have exerted pressure on E...
In the case Lautsi v. Italy, the European Court of Human Rights ruled twice on the validity of the p...
Increasingly, courts across Europe are passing judgement on issues of religion and education, but th...
The case of Lautsi v. Italy, better known as the “Crucifix Case,” is a particularly significant case...
The recent Lautsi case and the numerous decisions that were delivered both in Italy and by the Europ...
In November 2009 the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg ruled that crosses displayed in cl...
none1noIn the first part, the article focuses on the debate that has developed in Italy as regards t...
In Italy, unlike in most European countries, the debate over religious symbols in the public schools...
The article offers a socio-legal analysis of the recent case on freedom of/from religion in Italy, t...
2009 brought an existential crisis to the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). In November, it un...
The article offers a socio-legal analysis of the recent case on freedom of/from religion in Italy, t...