European laws strongly regulated the religious sector in the past, differentiating it from any commercial perspective. This legal conception is in mutation. Individualism, migrations and mass media have created a quantitatively and qualitatively varied religious market. Systems of state support to religions have waned. Religions often search other legal tools such as intellectual property (hereafter, IP) rights and emerging protection of traditions to protect their interests
This Introduction to our edited book, The Rise of Corporate Religious Liberty (Oxford University Pre...
This thesis asks how manifestation of religious belief by religious individuals can best be protecte...
Imagine if the Sermon on the Mount had been protected by copyright law….or if Moses had required adv...
The monopoly provided when trademark protection is given to a religious name is in direct tension wi...
In recent years, the number of countries in which a dominant church receives state aid and other for...
This Article presents Law & Religious Market as an alternative critical perspective to examine the n...
As this Symposium Article contends, religion increasingly overlaps with the commercial sphere, and c...
Scholars have frequently alluded to the normative value of the religious free market fostered by the...
This thesis explores the intersection between business and religion from a legal perspective. Initia...
Inherent in the two Religion Clauses is the possibility of conflict: some accommodations of religion...
Corporate religious liberty appears to be on the rise. The Supreme Court’s unanimous decision in Hos...
This article examines Worldwide Church of God v. Philadelphia Church of God, an influential case in ...
The article indicates the norms of law established in the European Union and Poland developed on the...
Religious symbols are historically significant and socially powerful. They have many forms and funct...
Most of the time in Europe – and it is especially true in Belgium, Spain, Italy, Luxembourg and Alsa...
This Introduction to our edited book, The Rise of Corporate Religious Liberty (Oxford University Pre...
This thesis asks how manifestation of religious belief by religious individuals can best be protecte...
Imagine if the Sermon on the Mount had been protected by copyright law….or if Moses had required adv...
The monopoly provided when trademark protection is given to a religious name is in direct tension wi...
In recent years, the number of countries in which a dominant church receives state aid and other for...
This Article presents Law & Religious Market as an alternative critical perspective to examine the n...
As this Symposium Article contends, religion increasingly overlaps with the commercial sphere, and c...
Scholars have frequently alluded to the normative value of the religious free market fostered by the...
This thesis explores the intersection between business and religion from a legal perspective. Initia...
Inherent in the two Religion Clauses is the possibility of conflict: some accommodations of religion...
Corporate religious liberty appears to be on the rise. The Supreme Court’s unanimous decision in Hos...
This article examines Worldwide Church of God v. Philadelphia Church of God, an influential case in ...
The article indicates the norms of law established in the European Union and Poland developed on the...
Religious symbols are historically significant and socially powerful. They have many forms and funct...
Most of the time in Europe – and it is especially true in Belgium, Spain, Italy, Luxembourg and Alsa...
This Introduction to our edited book, The Rise of Corporate Religious Liberty (Oxford University Pre...
This thesis asks how manifestation of religious belief by religious individuals can best be protecte...
Imagine if the Sermon on the Mount had been protected by copyright law….or if Moses had required adv...