What does it mean to say that a nation-state is secular? Secular law typically begins when a state has no religious competitor for authority. For this reason, it can be said that the Australian state is secular because its authority is derived from its own laws. What makes Australian law sovereign, the highest authority within the state, is its secularity. However, given Australia's colonial heritage, it is not just the absence of religious authority, such as a state religion, that gives the state its secularity. The law's foundations in colonial violence and the extinguishment of Indigenous sovereignty as a competing authority are also a crucial way in which secular Australian law can continue to operate as the sovereign authority within t...
The standard liberal account of religious freedom assumes that religious freedom is independent of n...
This article explains the weakness of the argument that religious vilification laws promote harmony ...
We introduce this collection by reflecting on relations between law and religion in constitutional a...
Section 116 of the Australian Constitution states that the Commonwealth shall not make a law establi...
Section 116 of the Australian Constitution states that the Commonwealth shall not make a law establi...
his article addresses two aspects of Australia's soft secular government. The first aspect explains ...
This article addresses two aspects of Australia's soft secular government. The first aspect explains...
In 1901, an act of the British Parliament established the modern, independent nation of Australia, o...
Western liberal states are considered to be secular in nature, with a presumed neutrality of state l...
The Williams case is a relevant segue to consider the broader issue of constitutional relations betw...
My aim is not to watch the gradual breaking down of a tradition - that of an 'established' church -u...
The new significance of religion in Australian politics raises serious questions about how our polit...
Institutionally and culturally, Australia bridges Britain and the United States, the Old and New Wor...
Institutionally and culturally, Australia bridges Britain and the United States, the Old and New Wor...
This paper discusses the role of Christian theology in Australian law and society in the period afte...
The standard liberal account of religious freedom assumes that religious freedom is independent of n...
This article explains the weakness of the argument that religious vilification laws promote harmony ...
We introduce this collection by reflecting on relations between law and religion in constitutional a...
Section 116 of the Australian Constitution states that the Commonwealth shall not make a law establi...
Section 116 of the Australian Constitution states that the Commonwealth shall not make a law establi...
his article addresses two aspects of Australia's soft secular government. The first aspect explains ...
This article addresses two aspects of Australia's soft secular government. The first aspect explains...
In 1901, an act of the British Parliament established the modern, independent nation of Australia, o...
Western liberal states are considered to be secular in nature, with a presumed neutrality of state l...
The Williams case is a relevant segue to consider the broader issue of constitutional relations betw...
My aim is not to watch the gradual breaking down of a tradition - that of an 'established' church -u...
The new significance of religion in Australian politics raises serious questions about how our polit...
Institutionally and culturally, Australia bridges Britain and the United States, the Old and New Wor...
Institutionally and culturally, Australia bridges Britain and the United States, the Old and New Wor...
This paper discusses the role of Christian theology in Australian law and society in the period afte...
The standard liberal account of religious freedom assumes that religious freedom is independent of n...
This article explains the weakness of the argument that religious vilification laws promote harmony ...
We introduce this collection by reflecting on relations between law and religion in constitutional a...