ABSTRACT
This book provides an in-depth, scholarly reflection on the challenges that arise in guaranteeing religious freedom and protection of the rights of religious minorities in law and practice. Currently, the protection of religious minorities constitutes one of the foundations of the international human rights protection systems and is provided for in the constitutions of all democratic states. The volume identifies, analyses, and assesses the legal status of religious freedom and protection of religious minorities, with special focus on Jewish and Muslim minorities in the European and Israeli legal environments. It compares the discourses on the scope and boundaries of religious freedom with the actual treatment of religious freedom in legal regulations, the case law, and in practice by the general society. The book employs the resources of comparative law and national and international law, as well as legal theory. Extensive use is also made of decisions of the international courts, including the European Court of Human Rights and the Court of Justice of the European Union. The book will be a valuable resource for academics, researchers, and policymakers working in the areas of law and religion, international human rights law, comparative constitutional law, and religious studies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |15 pages
Introduction
part I|78 pages
Jewish and Muslim Minorities as Vulnerable Groups under International Human Rights Law
chapter 1|34 pages
The ECtHR, the CJEU, and the Protection of Religious Minorities
chapter 2|25 pages
Strengthening the Protection of Religious Minorities by Establishing a New Universal Human Rights Treaty
part II|45 pages
Duty of Religious Neutrality and Impartiality
chapter 4|23 pages
Free Speech and Religious Sensitivity
chapter 5|20 pages
Employers' Duties to Respect the Religious Freedom of Employees at the Workplace: Recent Developments
part III|79 pages
Shechita and Traditional Circumcision Bans
chapter 7|25 pages
Animal Welfare and the Right to Freedom of Religion before the CJEU
part IV|117 pages
The Constitutional Boundaries of Religious Accommodation of Jewish and Muslim Minorities: National Perspectives
