The Death and New Life of Law and Religion

IF 0.4 Q3 LAW
Marc O De Girolami
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Abstract

The year 2023 was an end and a beginning. It saw the passing or retirement of many giants in the field of law and religion—scholars who brought their formidable erudition and insight to bear on questions that transcended legal doctrine, venturing upward into the heady realms of political theory, philosophy, history, sociology, and theology. These and other recent departures from the active world of law and religion are an occasion to reflect on the state of the field. This article begins with a brief history of the field, highlighting the questions that motivated it to emerge in the 1970s and 1980s and the intellectual currents and legal developments against which it was reacting. It then argues that some of the central concerns and inquiries that occupied law and religion as a discrete field of academic study in what it calls the first wave heyday are now at an end. These include the nature of religion and the secular in the law, the division between these concepts, and the implications for law and religion as an independent academic discipline; the concept of state neutrality as to religion and the connected public–private divide as respects what is religious and what is non-religiously political; and the regime of religious exemption for everyone with a sincere objection to a law as the central feature of religious free exercise, in constitutional and statutory law. This article argues that these are now, or will soon become, dead issues. Of course, they may well continue to be important for lawyers making and opposing claims in litigation, and for judges deciding among them, since the operative textual and doctrinal categories relevant to such claims will continue to depend on clever argumentation concerning some or all of them. And scholars will, no doubt, continue to wrangle over them. But to the extent that they continue to define the field or remain its signature issues, their growing irrelevance signals its death. Intellectual enterprises that survive over generations learn to adapt, and law and religion will need to do so as well. And, in fact, different issues, based on different premises and cultural circumstances, are beginning to emerge that may come to dominate the field and give it new life: the nature of political establishments and how they change; the use of ‘religion’ as a term for a category of political or ideological identity either to re-entrench or subvert political establishment; and the limits of what the so-called religious dissenters (who are now, and in large measure thanks to the first wave, indistinguishable from political or ideological dissenters) from the political establishment may reasonably expect in the way of accommodation from it. If the field is to survive, it will need to reorient itself towards new problems that afflict a very different world from the one in which it came into being.
法律与宗教的消亡与新生
2023 年是一个结束,也是一个开始。在这一年里,法律与宗教领域的许多巨匠相继离世或退休--这些学者以其强大的博学和洞察力解决了超越法律教义的问题,涉足了政治理论、哲学、历史、社会学和神学等令人兴奋的领域。这些以及其他最近从活跃的法律与宗教世界中走出的学者,为我们提供了一个反思该领域现状的机会。本文首先简要介绍了这一领域的历史,强调了促使它在 20 世纪 70 年代和 80 年代出现的问题,以及它所反对的思想潮流和法律发展。然后,文章认为,在所谓的第一波全盛时期,法律与宗教作为一个独立的学术研究领域所关注和探究的一些核心问题现在已经走到了尽头。这些问题包括:法律中宗教与世俗的性质,这些概念之间的划分,以及对法律与宗教作为一门独立学科的影响;国家对宗教保持中立的概念,以及与此相关的关于什么是宗教、什么是非宗教政治的公私划分;在宪法和成文法中,作为宗教自由活动的核心特征,对真诚反对某项法律的所有人实行宗教豁免的制度。本文认为,这些问题现在或很快就会成为死议题。当然,对于在诉讼中提出主张和反对主张的律师以及在其中做出裁决的法官来说,这些问题很可能仍然很重要,因为与这些主张相关的有效文本和理论范畴将继续取决于对其中某些或所有问题的巧妙论证。毫无疑问,学者们将继续为这些问题争论不休。但是,如果它们继续定义这一领域或继续成为其标志性问题,那么它们的日益无关性就预示着这一领域的消亡。世代相传的知识企业要学会适应,法律和宗教也需要如此。事实上,基于不同前提和文化环境的不同问题正在开始出现,它们可能会主导这一领域并赋予其新的生命:政治体制的性质及其如何变化;将 "宗教 "作为政治或意识形态身份类别的一个术语来重新巩固或颠覆政治体制;以及所谓的宗教异见者(在很大程度上,由于第一波浪潮的出现,他们现在与政治或意识形态异见者不可同日而语)对政治体制的合理期望的限度。如果该领域要生存下去,就需要重新定位,以解决新的问题,因为这些问题所困扰的世界与该领域诞生时的世界截然不同。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
16.70%
发文量
9
期刊介绍: Recent years have witnessed a resurgence of religion in public life and a concomitant array of legal responses. This has led in turn to the proliferation of research and writing on the interaction of law and religion cutting across many disciplines. The Oxford Journal of Law and Religion (OJLR) will have a range of articles drawn from various sectors of the law and religion field, including: social, legal and political issues involving the relationship between law and religion in society; comparative law perspectives on the relationship between religion and state institutions; developments regarding human and constitutional rights to freedom of religion or belief; considerations of the relationship between religious and secular legal systems; and other salient areas where law and religion interact (e.g., theology, legal and political theory, legal history, philosophy, etc.). The OJLR reflects the widening scope of study concerning law and religion not only by publishing leading pieces of legal scholarship but also by complementing them with the work of historians, theologians and social scientists that is germane to a better understanding of the issues of central concern. We aim to redefine the interdependence of law, humanities, and social sciences within the widening parameters of the study of law and religion, whilst seeking to make the distinctive area of law and religion more comprehensible from both a legal and a religious perspective. We plan to capture systematically and consistently the complex dynamics of law and religion from different legal as well as religious research perspectives worldwide. The OJLR seeks leading contributions from various subdomains in the field and plans to become a world-leading journal that will help shape, build and strengthen the field as a whole.
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