This article compares the law and religion jurisprudence of the us Supreme Court and the European Court of Human Rights across three legal areas: religious symbols and religion-state relations, individual religious freedom, and institutional religious freedom or freedom of the church. Particular focus is given to the manner in which this jurisprudence reveals the underlying structure and meaning of the secular. Although there continues to be significant jurisprudential diversity between these two courts and across these legal areas, there is also emerging a shared accounting of religion, secularity, and moral order in the late modern West
My dissertation explores the nature, source and scope of the rights of religious institutions in the...
(Excerpt) This Article traces the different approaches to religious freedom that the European Court ...
As this Symposium Article contends, religion increasingly overlaps with the commercial sphere, and c...
This paper compares the law and religious jurisprudence of the U.S. Supreme Court and the European C...
This paper compares the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights and the US Supreme Court...
Religious symbols are historically significant and socially powerful. They have many forms and funct...
The principle of autonomy of religious groups has acquired new importance in the recent decisions of...
Beginning with the Enlightenment in the 18th century religion was widely denounced by intellectuals....
With the rise of religious diversity within domestic societies, religion and religious pluralism hav...
Debates about the relationship between law and religion – be they concerned with freedom of religion...
The article compares, on the issues of religious symbols in public space, the case law of the Europe...
At first glance, religious courts, especially Sharia courts, seem incompatible with secular, democra...
This paper examines a trend in European and American High Courts to endorse majority religion by tra...
This article compares the recent jurisprudence of the US Supreme Court and the European Court of Hum...
Since the 1950s, United States Supreme Court holdings have transformed the United States from a poli...
My dissertation explores the nature, source and scope of the rights of religious institutions in the...
(Excerpt) This Article traces the different approaches to religious freedom that the European Court ...
As this Symposium Article contends, religion increasingly overlaps with the commercial sphere, and c...
This paper compares the law and religious jurisprudence of the U.S. Supreme Court and the European C...
This paper compares the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights and the US Supreme Court...
Religious symbols are historically significant and socially powerful. They have many forms and funct...
The principle of autonomy of religious groups has acquired new importance in the recent decisions of...
Beginning with the Enlightenment in the 18th century religion was widely denounced by intellectuals....
With the rise of religious diversity within domestic societies, religion and religious pluralism hav...
Debates about the relationship between law and religion – be they concerned with freedom of religion...
The article compares, on the issues of religious symbols in public space, the case law of the Europe...
At first glance, religious courts, especially Sharia courts, seem incompatible with secular, democra...
This paper examines a trend in European and American High Courts to endorse majority religion by tra...
This article compares the recent jurisprudence of the US Supreme Court and the European Court of Hum...
Since the 1950s, United States Supreme Court holdings have transformed the United States from a poli...
My dissertation explores the nature, source and scope of the rights of religious institutions in the...
(Excerpt) This Article traces the different approaches to religious freedom that the European Court ...
As this Symposium Article contends, religion increasingly overlaps with the commercial sphere, and c...