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Religion Law Commons

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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Religion Law

Given By Senator Orrin G. Hatch Before The Tenth Annual International Law And Religion Symposium, Orrin G. Hatch May 2004

Given By Senator Orrin G. Hatch Before The Tenth Annual International Law And Religion Symposium, Orrin G. Hatch

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


Advances In Religious Liberty In Peru, Guillermo Garcia-Montufar, Moises Arata Solis, Scott E. Isaacson May 2004

Advances In Religious Liberty In Peru, Guillermo Garcia-Montufar, Moises Arata Solis, Scott E. Isaacson

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


Religious Freedom And Laicite: A Comparison Of The United States And France, T.Jeremy Gunn May 2004

Religious Freedom And Laicite: A Comparison Of The United States And France, T.Jeremy Gunn

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


Religious Pluralism In Spain: Striking The Balance Between Religious Freedom And Constitutional Rights, Augustin Motilla May 2004

Religious Pluralism In Spain: Striking The Balance Between Religious Freedom And Constitutional Rights, Augustin Motilla

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


Individual Religious Freedom And National Security In Europe After September 11, Silvio Ferrari May 2004

Individual Religious Freedom And National Security In Europe After September 11, Silvio Ferrari

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


The German Headscarf Debate, Axel Frhr. Von Campenhausen May 2004

The German Headscarf Debate, Axel Frhr. Von Campenhausen

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


Religious Freedom And The Undoing Of The Westphalian State, Daniel Philpott Jan 2004

Religious Freedom And The Undoing Of The Westphalian State, Daniel Philpott

Michigan Journal of International Law

Not so long ago, in 1998, the world acknowledged both the fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the 350th anniversary of the Peace of Westphalia. The Universal Declaration was celebrated in the popular press, by thousands of activists, and at well attended open forums at schools and universities. Westphalia was noted almost exclusively at academic conferences. But public obscurity is an undeserved fate for Westphalia, for its legacy in organizing our political world vies with that of the American and French revolutions. What Westphalia inaugurated was a system of sovereign states where a single authority resided …