This paper uses evangelical reflections on the meaning of “rights” to explore the juridification of religion in contemporary England. Drawing on sixteen months of participatory fieldwork with evangelicals in London, I argue that English evangelicals’ critiques of Christian-interest litigation reflect the interaction of local theologies with developments in the law’s regulation of religion, developments that have contributed to the relativization of Protestant Christianity even as historic church establishment is maintained. Through an exploration of the tension between the goals of (rights-based) individualism and (Christian) relationalism as they concern the law, I show how litigation can affect religious subjectivity even in the absence o...
In a human rights era, European States are increasingly under pressure to give due regard to individ...
Two seemingly disparate case studies provide a fascinating lens through which to examine religion in...
English law has long held the principle that religions should be free from interference by the state...
This paper uses evangelical reflections on the meaning of “rights” to explore the juridification of ...
This paper uses evangelical reflections on the meaning of “rights” to explore the juridification of ...
Although human rights are often framed as the result of centuries of Western Christian thought, many...
Winnifred Fallers Sullivan has written and taught on religious discourse in the US Supreme Court; th...
Political protestantism has been an enduring theme in parliamentary and ecclesiastical politics and ...
The Young People’s Attitudes to Religious Diversity Project was established to compare the attitudes...
Since Evangelicals entered the political arena in the late 1970s, scholars and media have paid much ...
This article explores the formation of British evangelical university students as believers. Drawing...
There is no universal definition of religion under English law. Instead, different definitions have ...
In eighteenth-century Virginia, the Anglican church held the monopoly on religion in the colonies de...
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, something rather unexpected happened: religion became signi...
CITATION: Breytenbach, C. 2015. Fundamental rights and religion : the space between cathedral and pa...
In a human rights era, European States are increasingly under pressure to give due regard to individ...
Two seemingly disparate case studies provide a fascinating lens through which to examine religion in...
English law has long held the principle that religions should be free from interference by the state...
This paper uses evangelical reflections on the meaning of “rights” to explore the juridification of ...
This paper uses evangelical reflections on the meaning of “rights” to explore the juridification of ...
Although human rights are often framed as the result of centuries of Western Christian thought, many...
Winnifred Fallers Sullivan has written and taught on religious discourse in the US Supreme Court; th...
Political protestantism has been an enduring theme in parliamentary and ecclesiastical politics and ...
The Young People’s Attitudes to Religious Diversity Project was established to compare the attitudes...
Since Evangelicals entered the political arena in the late 1970s, scholars and media have paid much ...
This article explores the formation of British evangelical university students as believers. Drawing...
There is no universal definition of religion under English law. Instead, different definitions have ...
In eighteenth-century Virginia, the Anglican church held the monopoly on religion in the colonies de...
At the dawn of the twenty-first century, something rather unexpected happened: religion became signi...
CITATION: Breytenbach, C. 2015. Fundamental rights and religion : the space between cathedral and pa...
In a human rights era, European States are increasingly under pressure to give due regard to individ...
Two seemingly disparate case studies provide a fascinating lens through which to examine religion in...
English law has long held the principle that religions should be free from interference by the state...