A long-term and significant effect of the English Reformation of the 1530s has been the marginalisation of scholarship on religious law. Although this has begun to change in recent years, very little attention has been afforded to the defining features of religious law and whether it is useful to talk of a category of religious law. This article seeks to begin to redress this by constructing an understanding of religious law as necessarily having both a religious and legal character. It draws upon the work of Robert Alexy and Niklas Luhmann in particular to propose a necessarily interdisciplinary understanding to further stimulate scholarship on religious law
Blasphemy law was once an integral part of English constitutional and criminal law, such was the law...
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, something rather unexpected happened: religion became signi...
This article offers a sympathetic critique of Harold Bermans interpretation of the interaction betw...
A long-term and significant effect of the English Reformation of the 1530s has been the marginalisat...
Over the last 30 years, work at Cardiff University by my colleagues and I have identified and shaped...
There is no universal definition of religion under English law. Instead, different definitions have ...
Constitutional law and religious law are often portrayed as diametrically opposed domains. While the...
Paradoxically, Law and Religion is a new academic discipline which relates to an age old interaction...
I investigate the intersection of two of the most important areas governing how modern society is ...
This Article provides a brief analysis of the main shifts in Western law and legal theory in four wa...
Welsh jurist and Anglican theologian Norman Doe has pioneered the modern study of comparative “Chris...
Law and Religion has rapidly developed as an academic sub-discipline in English and Welsh Law School...
This Article analyzes the distinct legal contributions of the Lutheran, Calvinist, Anglican, and Ana...
This brief article surveys the interaction of law and religion from biblical times until today
The sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation revolutionized not only theology and the church, but al...
Blasphemy law was once an integral part of English constitutional and criminal law, such was the law...
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, something rather unexpected happened: religion became signi...
This article offers a sympathetic critique of Harold Bermans interpretation of the interaction betw...
A long-term and significant effect of the English Reformation of the 1530s has been the marginalisat...
Over the last 30 years, work at Cardiff University by my colleagues and I have identified and shaped...
There is no universal definition of religion under English law. Instead, different definitions have ...
Constitutional law and religious law are often portrayed as diametrically opposed domains. While the...
Paradoxically, Law and Religion is a new academic discipline which relates to an age old interaction...
I investigate the intersection of two of the most important areas governing how modern society is ...
This Article provides a brief analysis of the main shifts in Western law and legal theory in four wa...
Welsh jurist and Anglican theologian Norman Doe has pioneered the modern study of comparative “Chris...
Law and Religion has rapidly developed as an academic sub-discipline in English and Welsh Law School...
This Article analyzes the distinct legal contributions of the Lutheran, Calvinist, Anglican, and Ana...
This brief article surveys the interaction of law and religion from biblical times until today
The sixteenth-century Protestant Reformation revolutionized not only theology and the church, but al...
Blasphemy law was once an integral part of English constitutional and criminal law, such was the law...
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, something rather unexpected happened: religion became signi...
This article offers a sympathetic critique of Harold Bermans interpretation of the interaction betw...