This article compares how two closely related remedies, freedom of religion and the belief discrimination, are applied by domestic courts in the United Kingdom and Germany. It concludes that the current practice of the courts in these two countries differs considerably and questions why that is so given that the courts in both countries operate under essentially the same European legal framework determined by the ECHR and the EU law. It is suggested that decision‐making by domestic courts is still influenced by traditional domestic remedies and that domestic courts seem to find it difficult to adapt to new remedies. The article then gauges the potential for a common European approach, which, while theoretically possible, is unlikely ...
This article analyses recent trends in the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights conce...
The European Court of Human Rights has developed the idea that religious freedom, as recognised by t...
markdownabstract__Abstract__ This article aims to answer the question of whether duties of reason...
This article compares how two closely related remedies, freedom of religion and the belief discrimi...
This article considers how the approach of the European Union (EU) and its Court of Justice to relig...
This article considers how the approach of the European Union (EU) and its Court of Justice to relig...
In this Article, Professor Edward Eberle provides a comparative overview of constitutional safeguard...
(Excerpt) This Article traces the different approaches to religious freedom that the European Court ...
Freedom of conscience and confession is a right of every human being to profess a chosen religion or...
This study has caught a legal development in the making. The Court of Justice has, over the last ten...
The European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR)1 does not...
This article demonstrates that recent manifestations of religious neutrality in the case-law of Euro...
Over the past 20 years the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has evolved into a conspicuous, of...
In this article, I argue that there is no need to provide for reasonable accommodation of religion o...
This article assesses religious claims to exemptions from anti-dsicrimination laws in the context of...
This article analyses recent trends in the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights conce...
The European Court of Human Rights has developed the idea that religious freedom, as recognised by t...
markdownabstract__Abstract__ This article aims to answer the question of whether duties of reason...
This article compares how two closely related remedies, freedom of religion and the belief discrimi...
This article considers how the approach of the European Union (EU) and its Court of Justice to relig...
This article considers how the approach of the European Union (EU) and its Court of Justice to relig...
In this Article, Professor Edward Eberle provides a comparative overview of constitutional safeguard...
(Excerpt) This Article traces the different approaches to religious freedom that the European Court ...
Freedom of conscience and confession is a right of every human being to profess a chosen religion or...
This study has caught a legal development in the making. The Court of Justice has, over the last ten...
The European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR)1 does not...
This article demonstrates that recent manifestations of religious neutrality in the case-law of Euro...
Over the past 20 years the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has evolved into a conspicuous, of...
In this article, I argue that there is no need to provide for reasonable accommodation of religion o...
This article assesses religious claims to exemptions from anti-dsicrimination laws in the context of...
This article analyses recent trends in the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights conce...
The European Court of Human Rights has developed the idea that religious freedom, as recognised by t...
markdownabstract__Abstract__ This article aims to answer the question of whether duties of reason...