ABSTRACT

In recent years, there have been a number of concerns about the recognition of religious laws and the existence of religious courts and tribunals. There has also been the growing literature on legal pluralism which seeks to understand how more than one legal system can and should exist within one social space. However, whilst a number of important theoretical works concerning legal pluralism in the context of cultural rights have been published, little has been published specifically on religion. Religion and Legal Pluralism explores the extent to which religious laws are already recognised by the state and the extent to which religious legal systems, such as Sharia law, should be accommodated.

chapter 1|18 pages

The Impossible Compromise

part I|111 pages

In Practice

chapter 2|16 pages

Religion and the State

Recognition, Regulation and Facilitation

chapter 3|16 pages

Turbulent Priests

How the Church of England Disciplines its Errant Clergy

part II|65 pages

Particular Issues

part III|75 pages

In Theory

chapter 13|16 pages

Public Space, Private Face

Veiling as a Challenge for Legal Reasoning

chapter 15|24 pages

Religious Law as a Social System