The ‘Christian right’ in the UK may not be anywhere near as powerful as its US counterpart, but it still tries to exert influence on public policy. This has become increasingly difficult as fewer Britons identify themselves as Christian. Steven Kettell finds that although these campaigners bemoan the effects of secularisation, they have found themselves adopting secular arguments in order to oppose same-sex marriage, abortion and assisted dying
Over the years, states have been developing and implementing legislation with the aim of protecting ...
In the 2012 Audit of Democracy, Stuart Wilks-Heeg, Stephen Crone, and Andrew Blick looked at the key...
This paper explores the negotiation of political secularism by a migrant group who have a shared rel...
In recent years conservative Christian groups in Britain have been involved in a number of high prof...
The past decade has seen the rise of a strident anti-secular discourse in Britain. Based on the idea...
Conservative Christian groups in Britain have been involved in a number of high profile and controve...
The extension of non-heterosexual rights in largely liberal democratic contexts and confirmed in wid...
Secularisation remains a central but contested topic within the social sciences. Much of the debate ...
For the past century, the bulk of white evangelicalism has been tightly linked to very conservative ...
The subject of gay and lesbian rights is one of the most vexed and challenging issues facing contemp...
This article considers two streams of Christian Right mobilisation in the UK – the Christian Peoples...
Although sexual minority rights have not necessarily generated polarised views within Christian chur...
Must the state be neutral to all religious and philosophical positions? This article argues that tha...
Few recent legislative enactments in the United Kingdom have wrought so much controversy as the Equa...
n the British setting, the deployment of the phrase ‘doing god’ has become increasingly common to re...
Over the years, states have been developing and implementing legislation with the aim of protecting ...
In the 2012 Audit of Democracy, Stuart Wilks-Heeg, Stephen Crone, and Andrew Blick looked at the key...
This paper explores the negotiation of political secularism by a migrant group who have a shared rel...
In recent years conservative Christian groups in Britain have been involved in a number of high prof...
The past decade has seen the rise of a strident anti-secular discourse in Britain. Based on the idea...
Conservative Christian groups in Britain have been involved in a number of high profile and controve...
The extension of non-heterosexual rights in largely liberal democratic contexts and confirmed in wid...
Secularisation remains a central but contested topic within the social sciences. Much of the debate ...
For the past century, the bulk of white evangelicalism has been tightly linked to very conservative ...
The subject of gay and lesbian rights is one of the most vexed and challenging issues facing contemp...
This article considers two streams of Christian Right mobilisation in the UK – the Christian Peoples...
Although sexual minority rights have not necessarily generated polarised views within Christian chur...
Must the state be neutral to all religious and philosophical positions? This article argues that tha...
Few recent legislative enactments in the United Kingdom have wrought so much controversy as the Equa...
n the British setting, the deployment of the phrase ‘doing god’ has become increasingly common to re...
Over the years, states have been developing and implementing legislation with the aim of protecting ...
In the 2012 Audit of Democracy, Stuart Wilks-Heeg, Stephen Crone, and Andrew Blick looked at the key...
This paper explores the negotiation of political secularism by a migrant group who have a shared rel...