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Le Début De La Désillusion Américaine Envers L’Europe Et Le Droit International, 1914-1946 [The Onset Of American Disillusionment With Europe And International Law: 1914-1946], Mark Weston Janis
Faculty Articles and Papers
Many date the disillusionment of the United States with the international law and organization project to sometime after World War II. Actually, widespread American disillusionment with international law and organization began in 1914 with the outbreak of World War I. Many Americans became convinced that European civilization had failed to emerge from the excesses of state sovereignty and militarism. This essay illustrates the onset of American disillusionment with Europe and with international law and organization between 1914 and 1946.
The Shadow Of Westphalia: Majoritarian Religions And Strasbourg Law, Mark Weston Janis
The Shadow Of Westphalia: Majoritarian Religions And Strasbourg Law, Mark Weston Janis
Faculty Articles and Papers
Throughout Europe, religious majoritarian cultures have been traditionally hostile to minority faiths. The European Court of Human Rights has been slow to apply Article 9, religious tolerance. Albeit, today it is generally accepted that no one religion is destined to become the common faith of Europe, it is still very difficult in European law and politics to say how much each of the 47 Member States of the states of the Council of Europe should be permitted to restrict religious liberty domestically to protect and nurture a majoritarian faith, especially a majoritarian Christian faith. Europe, in many ways, is still …