ABSTRACT

With its increasingly secular and religiously diverse population Australia faces many challenges in determining how the state and religion should interact. Australia is not unique in facing these challenges. States worldwide, including common law countries with shared legal and religious heritages, have also been faced with the question of how the state and religion should relate to one another. Countries such as the United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand and the United States have all had to grapple with how to manage the state-religion relationship in the present day.

This book provides a comprehensive historical review of the interaction of the state and religion in Australia. It brings together multiple examples of areas in which the state and religion interact, and reviews these examples across Australia’s history from settlement through to present day. The book sets this story within a wider theoretical context via an examination of theories of state-religion relationships as well as a comparison with other similar common law jurisdictions.

The book demonstrates how the solutions arrived at in Australia is uniquely Australian owing to Australia’s unique legal system, religious demographics and history. However this is just one possible outcome among many that have been tried in common law liberal democracies.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

part I|120 pages

Theory and context

chapter 2|30 pages

Theories of State—religion relationships

chapter 3|25 pages

In the beginning

chapter 4|32 pages

Religion in the Australian Constitution

chapter 5|31 pages

Comparison with other jurisdictions

part II|191 pages

Australian case studies

chapter 6|50 pages

Contemporary issues

chapter 7|43 pages

Restricting religion

chapter 8|52 pages

Religion and education

chapter 9|44 pages

Funding religion

part III|8 pages

Conclusion

chapter 10|6 pages

Conclusion