Religious Approaches to Constitutionalism: Empirical Scholarship and Exceptionalism

IF 0.5 Q3 LAW Arab Law Quarterly Pub Date : 2023-11-13 DOI:10.1163/15730255-bja10148
Russell Powell
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Abstract

Abstract Nearly half of all countries have official religions or give preference to specific religious traditions. Most countries with an official religion are majority Muslim; however, most of those with a preference for particular religious traditions are majority Christian. This paper considers empirical data related to constitutional references to specific religions as a framework for a discussion of the comparative constitutional histories of Turkey and the Republic of Ireland. Both moved from systems that preferred their majority religions to ostensive neutrality. This analysis reinforces the importance of religion in law and policy regardless of cultural context and constitutional choices. Constitutional drafters have established a number of approaches to the treatment of religion, including freedom of religion, establishment of religion, separation of religion and state, neutrality, official religion, conformity, repugnancy, and sources of law/legislation. Although these linguistic choices are significant, they may not result in consistent practices across jurisdictions.
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宪政的宗教途径:经验学术与例外论
近一半的国家有官方宗教或对特定的宗教传统给予偏爱。大多数有官方宗教的国家多数是穆斯林;然而,大多数对特定宗教传统有偏好的人大多数是基督徒。本文考虑了与特定宗教的宪法参考相关的经验数据,作为讨论土耳其和爱尔兰共和国比较宪法历史的框架。两国都从偏好多数宗教的制度转向了表面上的中立。这一分析强调了宗教在法律和政策中的重要性,无论文化背景和宪法选择如何。宪法起草者确立了若干处理宗教问题的办法,包括宗教自由、建立宗教、政教分离、中立、官方宗教、遵从、反对和法律/立法的来源。尽管这些语言选择很重要,但它们可能不会导致跨司法管辖区的一致实践。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
33.30%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: The leading English-language legal publication in its field, Arab Law Quarterly covers all aspects of Arab laws, both Shari"a and secular. Now in its third decade, it provides an important forum of authoritative articles on the laws and legal developments throughout the twenty countries of the Arab world, notes on recent legislation and case law, guidelines on future changes, and reviews of the latest literature in the field. Particular subject areas covered are Arab laws in trans-national affairs, commercial law, Islamic law (the Shari´a), and international comparative law.
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