The law of organized religions : between establishment and secularism / Julian Rivers.
2010
KD8642 .R58 2010 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
The law of organized religions : between establishment and secularism / Julian Rivers.
Published
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, [2010]
Copyright
©2010
Call Number
KD8642 .R58 2010
ISBN
9780199226108 (cloth : alk. paper)
0199226105 (cloth : alk. paper)
0199226105 (cloth : alk. paper)
Description
l, 368 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)655635654
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages [348]-362) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Preface
vii
List of Abbreviations
xv
Table of Cases
xix
Table of International Treaties, Conventions and other Legal Instruments
xxxi
Table of Legislation
xxxv
Tabel of Statutory Instruments
xlvii
Table of European Legislation
li
Table of Foreign Legislation
li
1.
The Changing Law of Church and State
1
I.
The First Millennium
1
II.
From the Norman Conquest to the Break with Rome
4
III.
Reformation and Revolution
9
IV.
Establishment and Toleration
13
V.
Religious Pluralism
20
VI.
Towards the Modern State
25
VII.
Conclusion
31
2.
The Human Rights of Religious Associations
33
I.
The Place of Religion in International Law
33
II.
From Individual to Collective International Religious Rights
37
III.
Collective Religious Rights under the European Convention
50
IV.
The Human Rights of Religious Associations
55
V.
Conclusion
70
3.
The Constitution of Religious Bodies
72
I.
Religious Form and Legal Expression
72
II.
The Law up to 1869
74
III.
Modern Statutory and Corporate Structures
82
IV.
Members' Rights
88
V.
Religious Property and the Problem of Schism
96
VI.
Religious Courts, Natural Justice, and Judicial Review
100
VII.
Conclusion
107
4.
Ministers of Religion
108
I.
Office-holders, Contractors, Employees, or Workers?
109
II.
Employment Equality and Religious Ethos
122
III.
The Legal Status of Ministers of Religion
137
IV.
Conclusion
146
5.
Public Religion
147
I.
The Registration of Places of Worship
147
II.
Charitable Religion
158
III.
The Ecclesiastical Exemption
175
IV.
Conclusion
178
6.
Regulated Rites
181
I.
Rites of Passage
182
II.
Dietary Requirements
192
III.
Unconventional Worship
194
IV.
Conclusion
205
7.
Chaplaincies
207
I.
Armed Forces Chaplaincies
208
II.
Prison Chaplaincies
215
III.
Hospital Chaplaincies
220
IV.
University, Professional, and Industrial Chaplaincies
223
V.
Chaplaincies and Human Rights
226
VI.
Conclusion
232
8.
Faith Schools
234
I.
Religion and Schools before 1902
234
II.
Faith-Based Education in the Twentieth Century
238
III.
The Human Rights Dimension
242
IV.
Religious Pluralism in the Maintained Sector
251
V.
Religious Pluralism in the Independent Sector
260
VI.
Conclusion
266
9.
Faith-Based Welfare
268
I.
Before the Welfare State
268
II.
Faith-Based Charity in the Welfare State
272
III.
Èquality and Diversity' as a Third Secularizing Moment?
276
IV.
Roman Catholic Adoption Agencies under the New Secularism
284
V.
Conclusion
287
10.
Access to Public Discourse
289
I.
Representation in the House of Lords
289
II.
New Consultation Processes
296
III.
Religious Broadcasting
305
IV.
Conclusion
314
11.
In Search of Principle
316
I.
The Inadequacy of Individual Rights
318
II.
Establishment by Law
322
III.
Two Concepts of Legal Secularism
328
IV.
Autonomy
334
V.
Neutrality
340
VI.
Between Establishment and Secularism
344
Bibliography
348
Index
363