1st Edition

Religion, Law and the Constitution Balancing Beliefs in Britain

By Javier García Oliva, Helen Hall Copyright 2018
498 Pages
by Routledge

522 Pages
by Routledge

522 Pages
by Routledge

This book examines the existing constitutional and legal system in England, Wales and Scotland, through the prism of its treatment of religion and belief. The study encompasses questions of Church/state relations, but pushes far beyond these. It asks whether the approach to religion which has spread out from establishment to permeate the whole legal framework is a cause of concern or... Read more

Foreword

Introduction

Preliminary thoughts

1. Church/state relations and their historical evolution: whale knees or penguin wings?

2. Religion in the current paradigm: the flight of the penguin?

3. Non-religious beliefs in the current paradigm

4. The rule of law and the religious character of the Constitution and the wider legal framework

5. Parliamentary supremacy and the religious character of the Constitution and the wider legal framework

6. Checks and balances, separation of powers and the religious character of the Constitution and the wider legal framework

7. Human rights and the religious character of the Constitution and the wider legal framework

Conclusion

Biography

Dr Javier García Oliva, Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Manchester.

Dr Helen Hall, Lecturer in Law, Nottingham Trent University.

"The position of religion in British public life is discussed and contested today more than ever; but the question is not often thought through in relation to wider issues about conscience and the moral accountability of public life.  The authors of this highly original and intelligent book examine carefully the way in which legal approaches to religion in the UK help to safeguard the possibility of conscientious diversity and moral debate in British society.A very important book for all who are concerned about preserving ethically literate democracy"Archbishop Rowan Williams, United Kingdom   

"This timely book is a subtle and in places provocative meditation on the place of religion in the constitutional framework of Great Britain. While the framework prioritises the rule of law, parliamentary sovereignty, checks and balances, and protection for human rights it also, argue the authors, contains a valuable soft  presumption in favour of religious practice. This aspect of legal and political culture, they suggest, has produced over time a system that is broadly liberal. It is also tolerant not only of a wide range of religious practices but also, by analogy and extension, of the practices of many other belief systems including atheism."–Dawn Oliver, Emeritus Professor of Constitutional Law, UCL,United Kingdom