
Religions are a problem for human rights, and human rights are a problem for religions. And both are problems for courts. This book presents an interpretation of how religion and human rights interrelate in the legal context, and how this relationship might be reconceived to make this relationship somewhat less fraught. Litigating Religions, an essay adapted by Christopher McCrudden from the Alberico Gentili Lectures given at the University of Macerata, Italy, examines how the resurgent role of religion in public life gives rise to tensions with key aspects of human rights, in particular freedom of religion and anti-discrimination law, and how these tensions cannot be considered as simply transitional. The context for the discussion is the increasingly troubled area of human rights litigation involving religious arguments, such as wearing religious dress at work, conscientious objections by marriage registrars, admission of children to religious schools, prohibitions on same-sex marriage, and access to abortion. Christopher McCrudden argues that, if we wish to establish a better dialogue between the contending views, we must address a set of recurring problems identifiable in such litigation. To address these problems requires changes both in human rights theory and in religious understandings.
This book investigates the inherent tensions between religious practice and human rights frameworks within the modern judicial system. Christopher McCrudden, a legal scholar, utilizes his analysis from the Alberico Gentili Lectures to examine how courts navigate the intersection of religious expression and anti-discrimination law. He argues that the current friction is not a temporary phenomenon but a structural challenge requiring a fundamental shift in both legal theory and religious interpretation to foster a more productive dialogue.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and practitioners view this work as a significant contribution to the discourse on judicial neutrality and religious accommodation. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's rigorous approach to balancing competing rights claims.
Page Count:
192
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191076864
ISBN-13:
9780191076862
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