The article compares, on the issues of religious symbols in public space, the case law of the European Court of Human Rights, and that of the US Supreme Court. The enquiry aims at outlining a comparison between the contents of the decisions, not between the Courts: one is a constitutional court, the other an international court which in the late decades has been a breakthrough in the European system of guarantees. The main points emerged through the comparison are: first of all, the European Court, unlike the US SC, is clearly engaged in building a European secularism that leaves religious symbols outside the public space. The Strasbourg Court adopts a conception of secularism which, in principle, is very different from American secularism....
This article considers how the approach of the European Union (EU) and its Court of Justice to relig...
This article compares the law and religion jurisprudence of the us Supreme Court and the European Co...
This paper compares the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights and the US Supreme Court...
The article compares, on the issues of religious symbols in public space, the case law of the Europe...
Religious symbols are historically significant and socially powerful. They have many forms and funct...
This article discusses the role of the European Court of Human Rights in regulating the symbolic est...
This Article shows that the European Court of Human Rights case of Lautsi v. Italy, upholding the di...
(Excerpt) This Article traces the different approaches to religious freedom that the European Court ...
This Article traces the different approaches to religious freedom that the European Court of Human ...
This article considers how the approach of the European Union (EU) and its Court of Justice to relig...
This article challenges the conception of religion that the European Court of Human Rights has impli...
This paper compares the law and religious jurisprudence of the U.S. Supreme Court and the European C...
This article compares the recent jurisprudence of the US Supreme Court and the European Court of Hum...
In the fi eld of human rights protection, two supranational courts operate in Europe, each with its ...
The increasing religious diversity in western Europe poses challenges for courts, including the Euro...
This article considers how the approach of the European Union (EU) and its Court of Justice to relig...
This article compares the law and religion jurisprudence of the us Supreme Court and the European Co...
This paper compares the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights and the US Supreme Court...
The article compares, on the issues of religious symbols in public space, the case law of the Europe...
Religious symbols are historically significant and socially powerful. They have many forms and funct...
This article discusses the role of the European Court of Human Rights in regulating the symbolic est...
This Article shows that the European Court of Human Rights case of Lautsi v. Italy, upholding the di...
(Excerpt) This Article traces the different approaches to religious freedom that the European Court ...
This Article traces the different approaches to religious freedom that the European Court of Human ...
This article considers how the approach of the European Union (EU) and its Court of Justice to relig...
This article challenges the conception of religion that the European Court of Human Rights has impli...
This paper compares the law and religious jurisprudence of the U.S. Supreme Court and the European C...
This article compares the recent jurisprudence of the US Supreme Court and the European Court of Hum...
In the fi eld of human rights protection, two supranational courts operate in Europe, each with its ...
The increasing religious diversity in western Europe poses challenges for courts, including the Euro...
This article considers how the approach of the European Union (EU) and its Court of Justice to relig...
This article compares the law and religion jurisprudence of the us Supreme Court and the European Co...
This paper compares the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights and the US Supreme Court...