The rule of law and religion can act as commercial substitutes. Both can create the trust required for material prosperity. The rule of law simplifies social interactions, turning people into formal legal agents and generating a map of society that the state can observe and control, thus credibly committing to the enforcement of the legal rights demanded by impersonal markets. Religion, in contrast, embraces complex social identities. Within these communities, economic actors can monitor and sanction misbehavior. Both approaches have benefits and problems. The rule of law allows for trade among strangers, fostering peaceful pluralism. However, law breeds what Montesquieu called a certain feeling for exact justice that crowds out deeper fo...
Economie life in Europe was for many centuries governed by a law derived from religious sources, as ...
This thesis explores the intersection between business and religion from a legal perspective. Initia...
The research has found its inspiring reason in the perception of important confessional belonging r...
The rule of law and religion can act as commercial substitutes. Both can create the trust required f...
Religion and law are often portrayed as belonging to different, isolated spheres and as conflicting ...
Currently, one of the approaches to the relationship between law and religion is based on the assump...
This Essay uses The Challenge of Co-Religionist Commerce, by Professors Michael Helfand and Barak Ri...
As this Symposium Article contends, religion increasingly overlaps with the commercial sphere, and c...
This Article addresses the question of law, religion, and the market directly. It does so by develop...
This Article presents Law & Religious Market as an alternative critical perspective to examine the n...
ABSTRACT: In history, between Law and Religion there existed an important connection because both ha...
Starting from the Middle Ages\u27 early conceptualizations of rights and law to contemporary politic...
<p><span lang="EN-US">The theory of the religious market begins with the observation of religious pl...
In the economic field, the law is often perceived solely for the service function it provides (or sh...
What purpose is served by a government\u27s protection of religious liberty? Many have been suggeste...
Economie life in Europe was for many centuries governed by a law derived from religious sources, as ...
This thesis explores the intersection between business and religion from a legal perspective. Initia...
The research has found its inspiring reason in the perception of important confessional belonging r...
The rule of law and religion can act as commercial substitutes. Both can create the trust required f...
Religion and law are often portrayed as belonging to different, isolated spheres and as conflicting ...
Currently, one of the approaches to the relationship between law and religion is based on the assump...
This Essay uses The Challenge of Co-Religionist Commerce, by Professors Michael Helfand and Barak Ri...
As this Symposium Article contends, religion increasingly overlaps with the commercial sphere, and c...
This Article addresses the question of law, religion, and the market directly. It does so by develop...
This Article presents Law & Religious Market as an alternative critical perspective to examine the n...
ABSTRACT: In history, between Law and Religion there existed an important connection because both ha...
Starting from the Middle Ages\u27 early conceptualizations of rights and law to contemporary politic...
<p><span lang="EN-US">The theory of the religious market begins with the observation of religious pl...
In the economic field, the law is often perceived solely for the service function it provides (or sh...
What purpose is served by a government\u27s protection of religious liberty? Many have been suggeste...
Economie life in Europe was for many centuries governed by a law derived from religious sources, as ...
This thesis explores the intersection between business and religion from a legal perspective. Initia...
The research has found its inspiring reason in the perception of important confessional belonging r...