ABSTRACT

The complex legal situations arising from the coexistence of international law, state law, and social and religious norms in different parts of the world often include scenarios of conflict between them. These conflicting norms issued from different categories of ‘laws’ result in difficulties in describing, identifying and analysing human rights in plural environments.

This volume studies how normative conflicts unfold when trapped in the aspirations of human rights and their local realizations. It reflects on how such tensions can be eased, while observing how and why they occur. The authors examine how obedience or resistance to the official law is generated through the interaction of a multiplicity of conflicting norms, interpretations and practices. Emphasis is placed on the actors involved in raising or decreasing the tension surrounding the conflict and the implications that the conflict carries, whether resolved or not, in conditions of asymmetric power movements. It is argued that legal responsiveness to state law depends on how people with different identities deal with it, narrate it and build expectations from it, bearing in mind that normative pluralism may also operate as an instrument towards the exclusion of certain communities from the public sphere. The chapters look particularly to expose the dialogue between parallel normative spheres in order for law to become more effective, while investigating the types of socio-legal variables that affect the functioning of law, leading to conflicts between rights, values and entire cultural frames.

chapter 1

Introduction

1Conflicts over justice and hybrid social actors as legal agents

part I|37 pages

Preventing conflict

chapter 2|23 pages

Beyond the pedagogical beauty of dichotomy

39Comparative law methodology in liquid times

chapter 3|13 pages

Managing language in multicultural societies

Learning from the Indian experience

part II|92 pages

Articulating conflict

chapter 4|30 pages

De-religionising religion

76The European Court of Human Rights and the conflict of definition

chapter 5|17 pages

Immigrants or new religious minorities?

Conflicting European and international perspectives

chapter 6|19 pages

Conscientious objection in Swedish and Italian healthcare

Paradoxical secularizations and unbalanced pluralisms

chapter 7|25 pages

The unfinished education

Religion, education and power struggles in multicultural Israel

part III|53 pages

Processing conflict

chapter 8|22 pages

Feminist dilemmas

168The challenges in accommodating women’s rights within religion-based family law in India

chapter 9|18 pages

Tamāshā

The theatrics of disputing and non-state dispute processing

chapter 10|12 pages

Can law ‘sustain’ cultural diversity?

The inheritance laws of Indian minority communities and the Italian legal system

part IV|60 pages

Resolving conflict

chapter 13|17 pages

Adjudication in a pluralized legal field

Proposing communication as an analytical device

chapter 14|7 pages

Two legal orders and one cause

Or a way to simultaneous decision-making