Father Robert Drinan, long a leading advocate of human rights, has had a distinguished career serving as a U.S. congressman from Massachusetts, as Dean of the Boston College Law School, and now as Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center. Father Drinan\u27s new book, Can God and Caesar Coexist?: Balancing Religious Freedom and International Law, sensitively and persuasively sets out the often tortuous relations among religion (the God of his title), national governments (Caesar), and international law (the new and possibly helpful partner in this relationship). My essay employs the facts and arguments in Father Drinan\u27s Can God and Caesar Coexist? as a sounding board for a single, central observation. In the oftentimes dysfu...
This article discusses the relationship of law and religion in American culture. It constructs a the...
This Article compares First Amendment religious liberty with prevailing international human rights n...
Man is a religious being. To him, everywhere and always, religion and religious institutions have be...
Father Robert Drinan, long a leading advocate of human rights, has had a distinguished career servin...
Can international law be used to address conflicts that arise out of questions of the freedom of rel...
I will argue that international law needs religion because it is indeterminate and that internationa...
International civil religion grounds moral claims that permeate and transcend traditional religious ...
This books maps out the territory of international law and religion challenging receiving traditions...
It is well established that religions and religious antagonisms are not foreign to the building-up o...
This symposium Essay comments on four interrelated themes regarding the right to religious liberty i...
Section II of this Article studies in greater detail the religio-legal debate currently being waged ...
Religious principles, religious problems, and religious enthusiasts have all played profound, if som...
Some Reflections on Multiculturalism, \u27Equal Concern and Respect,\u27 and the Establishment Claus...
This Article presents a critique of the historical evolution of the right to freedom of religion in ...
Is religious freedom a fundamental human right? This comment examines the theological and legal basi...
This article discusses the relationship of law and religion in American culture. It constructs a the...
This Article compares First Amendment religious liberty with prevailing international human rights n...
Man is a religious being. To him, everywhere and always, religion and religious institutions have be...
Father Robert Drinan, long a leading advocate of human rights, has had a distinguished career servin...
Can international law be used to address conflicts that arise out of questions of the freedom of rel...
I will argue that international law needs religion because it is indeterminate and that internationa...
International civil religion grounds moral claims that permeate and transcend traditional religious ...
This books maps out the territory of international law and religion challenging receiving traditions...
It is well established that religions and religious antagonisms are not foreign to the building-up o...
This symposium Essay comments on four interrelated themes regarding the right to religious liberty i...
Section II of this Article studies in greater detail the religio-legal debate currently being waged ...
Religious principles, religious problems, and religious enthusiasts have all played profound, if som...
Some Reflections on Multiculturalism, \u27Equal Concern and Respect,\u27 and the Establishment Claus...
This Article presents a critique of the historical evolution of the right to freedom of religion in ...
Is religious freedom a fundamental human right? This comment examines the theological and legal basi...
This article discusses the relationship of law and religion in American culture. It constructs a the...
This Article compares First Amendment religious liberty with prevailing international human rights n...
Man is a religious being. To him, everywhere and always, religion and religious institutions have be...