Registration, recognition, and freedom of religion or belief

IF 0.4 Q3 LAW
Brandon Reece Taylorian, Marco Ventura
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Violations of religious freedom resulting from how states arrange their recognition and registration policies continue to escalate around the world. States might seek to regulate the religious activities of their citizens and recognition and registration are convenient tools in this pursuit. Registration is sometimes made mandatory; groups may be barred from accessing it and what they must do to first obtain and then to maintain registered status can be onerous. Such restrictive policies serve to preserve a religious or political hegemony by filtering out religions and beliefs deemed unfavourable and unworthy of recognition. After surveying the ways recognition and registration are misused, this article contends that more definitive international standards are necessary to supersede ambiguous guidelines. Furthermore, this article deliberates over the plausibility that recognition, as a mode of state–religion relations, might still have the potential to facilitate freedom of religion or belief. This relies on whether a state uses recognition to facilitate all religions and beliefs by reducing deep-set favouritism and any administrative hurdles imposed during registration.
登记、承认和宗教或信仰自由
各国如何安排承认和登记政策导致的侵犯宗教自由行为在世界各地继续升级。各国可能寻求规范其公民的宗教活动,承认和登记是这方面的便利工具。注册有时是强制性的;团体可能被禁止访问它,他们必须做些什么才能首先获得并保持注册状态,这可能是繁重的。这种限制性政策有助于通过过滤被认为不利和不值得承认的宗教和信仰来维护宗教或政治霸权。在调查了承认和登记被滥用的方式后,本文认为有必要制定更明确的国际标准来取代模棱两可的准则。此外,这篇文章还探讨了承认作为一种国教关系模式,仍有可能促进宗教或信仰自由的合理性。这取决于一个国家是否利用承认来减少根深蒂固的偏袒和登记过程中施加的任何行政障碍,从而为所有宗教和信仰提供便利。
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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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