This article deals with the role of criminal law in dealing with defamatory expressions about religion or belief. Defamation of religion and belief is a form of indirect defamation ‘via identification’ which, as the discussion about the Dutch group defamation law shows, stretches up the notion of ‘group defamation’ — a crime which requires that (groups of) persons are insulted because they belong to a religious group. This contribution investigates whether European states can legitimately criminalise (certain forms of) defamation of religion and belief, in light of the European Convention on Human Rights, the United Nations framework (particularly the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights) and legal theoretical considerations...
Blasphemy as the act of insulting a deity must be distinguished from two other acts: defamation of r...
In this paper we shall discuss the ways in which Dutch law protects against group defamation
This article will attempt to sketch briefly the extent of the remedies in tort and the restraints in...
Recently there have been calls from Islamic nations for the creation of a crime of “defamation of re...
Recently there have been calls from Islamic nations for the creation of a crime of "defamation ...
Recently there have been calls from Islamic nations for the creation of a crime of "defamation ...
The UK’s Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 makes it an offence to deliberately stir up hatred aga...
The UK’s Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 makes it an offence to deliberately stir up hatred aga...
The Dutch law of criminal defamation consists of a number of offences protecting a legal interest co...
By means of the requirements of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Funda...
The emerging international human rights norm of “defamation of religion”, an ongoing flashpoint in d...
Introduction Human rights are the basic rights we inherit as humans regardless of race, colour, gend...
The emerging international human rights norm of “defamation of religion,” an ongoing flashpoint in d...
Anti-blasphemy laws have endured criticism in light of the modern, secular and democratic state syst...
This thesis asks how manifestation of religious belief by religious individuals can best be protecte...
Blasphemy as the act of insulting a deity must be distinguished from two other acts: defamation of r...
In this paper we shall discuss the ways in which Dutch law protects against group defamation
This article will attempt to sketch briefly the extent of the remedies in tort and the restraints in...
Recently there have been calls from Islamic nations for the creation of a crime of “defamation of re...
Recently there have been calls from Islamic nations for the creation of a crime of "defamation ...
Recently there have been calls from Islamic nations for the creation of a crime of "defamation ...
The UK’s Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 makes it an offence to deliberately stir up hatred aga...
The UK’s Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 makes it an offence to deliberately stir up hatred aga...
The Dutch law of criminal defamation consists of a number of offences protecting a legal interest co...
By means of the requirements of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Funda...
The emerging international human rights norm of “defamation of religion”, an ongoing flashpoint in d...
Introduction Human rights are the basic rights we inherit as humans regardless of race, colour, gend...
The emerging international human rights norm of “defamation of religion,” an ongoing flashpoint in d...
Anti-blasphemy laws have endured criticism in light of the modern, secular and democratic state syst...
This thesis asks how manifestation of religious belief by religious individuals can best be protecte...
Blasphemy as the act of insulting a deity must be distinguished from two other acts: defamation of r...
In this paper we shall discuss the ways in which Dutch law protects against group defamation
This article will attempt to sketch briefly the extent of the remedies in tort and the restraints in...