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Two Concepts of Religious Freedom in the European Court of Human Rights

Nehal Bhuta
- 21 Dec 2014 - 
- Vol. 113, Iss: 1, pp 9-35
TLDR
In this paper, the authors consider the way in which recent historical work on the history of freedom of religion and freedom of conscience opens up a new interpretation of the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights in the headscarf cases, and argue that the decisions turn less on the balance between state neutrality and religious belief, than on an understanding of certain religious symbols as a threat to public order and as harbingers of sectarian strife which undermine democracy.
Abstract
This paper considers the way in which recent historical work on the history of freedom of religion and freedom of conscience opens up a new interpretation of the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights in the headscarf cases. These decisions have been widely criticized as adopting a militantly secularist approach to the presence of Islamic religious symbols in the public sphere, an approach that seems inconsistent or even overtly discriminatory in light of the court’s recent decision in Lautsi that the compulsory display of crucifixes in the classroom did not breach Italy’s convention obligations. I argue that the headscarf cases turn less on the balance between state neutrality and religious belief, than on an understanding of certain religious symbols as a threat to public order and as harbingers of sectarian strife which undermine democracy.

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DEPARTMENT OF LAW
EUI Working Papers
LAW 2012/33
DEPARTMENT OF LAW
TWO CONCEPTS OF RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN THE
EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS
Nehal Bhuta


EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE
,
FLORENCE
DEPARTMENT OF LAW
Two Concepts of Religious Freedom in the European Court of Human Rights
NEHAL BHUTA
EUI Working Paper LAW 2012/33

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ISSN 1725-6739
© 2012 Nehal Bhuta
Printed in Italy
European University Institute
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I – 50014 San Domenico di Fiesole (FI)
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Abstract
This paper considers the way in which recent historical work on the history of freedom of religion and
freedom of conscience opens up a new interpretation of the decisions of the European Court of Human
Rights in the headscarf cases. These decisions have been widely criticized as adopting a militantly
secularist approach to the presence of Islamic religious symbols in the public sphere, an approach that
seems inconsistent or even overtly discriminatory in light of the court’s recent decision in Lautsi that
the compulsory display of crucifixes in the classroom did not breach Italy’s convention obligations. I
argue that the headscarf cases turn less on the balance between state neutrality and religious belief,
than on an understanding of certain religious symbols as a threat to public order and as harbingers of
sectarian strife which undermine democracy.
Keywords
freedom of religion, European Court of Human Rights, secularism, public order, headscarf

Citations
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Religious Freedom and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

TL;DR: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) is widely considered to be the most influential statement on religious freedom in human history as mentioned in this paper, and it has been used as a basis for many international human rights initiatives.
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Tentacles of the Leviathan? Nationalism, Islamophobia, and the Insufficiency-yet-Indispensability of Human Rights for Religious Freedom in Contemporary Europe

TL;DR: In this article, an approach to human rights and methodological nationalism is proposed to counter and explore alternatives to the prevailing conceptions of human rights, nationalism, and state sovereignty in the discourse on the putative impossibility and insidiousness of religious freedom.
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Culture and order in world politics

TL;DR: The authors argue that cultural diversity in social life is ubiquitous rather than exceptional, and demonstrate that the organization of cultural diversity has been inextricably tied to the constitution and legitimation of political authority in diverse international orders, from Warring States China, through early modern Europe and the Ottoman and Qing Empires, to today's global liberal order.
References
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Veil: Mirror of Identity

TL;DR: The Islamic headscarf has become the subject of heated legal and political debate as mentioned in this paper, and even the UK, long a champion of multiculturalism, has recently restricted the veil proper.
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The Margin of Appreciation Doctrine in the Dynamics of European Human Rights Jurisprudence

TL;DR: The International Supervisory Function and the National Margin of Appreciation Doctrine: Survey of the Cases as mentioned in this paper is a survey of the cases in the field of criminal and civil due process.
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The States System of Europe, 1640-1990: Peacemaking and the Conditions of International Stability

TL;DR: Osiander as mentioned in this paper analyzed the evolution of the states system of Europe since the mid-seventeenth century and showed how a prevailing consensus on certain structural concepts (such as the balance of power or national self-determination) has influenced the evolution and determined its stability or lack of stability.
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The Inflation of the Margin of Appreciation by the European Court of Human Rights

TL;DR: The margin of appreciation doctrine of the European Court of Human Rights is still to some extent mysterious as discussed by the authors, despite being repeatedly used by the ECHR since its inception in the 1990s.
Frequently Asked Questions (12)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "Law 2012/33 department of law two concepts of religious freedom in the european court of human rights" ?

This paper considers the way in which recent historical work on the history of freedom of religion and freedom of conscience opens up a new interpretation of the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights in the headscarf cases. 

Freedom of conscience was, unsurprisingly, understood as the cornerstone of this new carapace of institutional and legal limits on secular politics. 

The outcome of any given application of the proportionality and balancing method is deeply context-dependent, a function of stylized facts and interpretive judgments about not only how to accord weight to competing values and interests, but also about whether and in what way the values and interests are competing and in need of balancing. 

Christian politics’ preference for neo-corporatist organic community or the revival of traditional foundations of moral and social authority led it unsurprisingly to flirt with or embrace Fascism and other authoritarian movements against socialism and communism (Kaiser 2007: 60-61). 

But the Catholic Church’s anti-totalitarian turn after 1937, and the exile of prominent inter-war Catholic activists such as Sturzo and Maritain, led to a pivotal change in orientation: “Catholic political refugees came back from Britain and the United States with a changed normative hierarchy in which individual liberty was … more important than before, thus pointing the way towards the more liberal Christian democracy of postwar western Europe. … 

Although inter-war personalist currents were far from committed to democracy, Maritain’s reconstruction of a personalism rooted in prepolitical natural rights also envisioned a Christian democracy in which the preservation of the value of the human person was the guiding ideal of a democratic political order. 

The historicity of contemporary claims of right has become the central theme of a new generation of critical scholarship about one of the most influential global political languages of the last thirty years. 

In the specific instance of freedom of conscience, recent scholarship has revealed two important influences on the formulation of the right as it appears in the Universal Declaration and in the European Convention: Christian personalism, and ecumenical missionary movements. 

In the meantime, the regulations were appealed to the Istanbul Administrative Court, which dismissed the complaint because the regulatory power of the university had been exercised in accordance with the relevant legislation and judgments of the Constitutional Courts and the Supreme Administrative Court. 

She was subjected to disciplinary proceedings and was suspended for a semester in 1999, in part due to her joining a protest against the rules on dress. 

Schmitt’s stylization of the rechtstaat ideal is helpful in grasping the distinctiveness of this thinking (although, as with so much of his argument, the stylization aims partly to exacerbate a perceived contradiction between concepts in order to demonstrate that the ideal is now defunct): 

The requirement that state intrusions on basic rights be calculable, definable and controllable is of course the echo of early doctrines of proportionality, a consequence of the tension between polizei and rechtstaat concepts of the state.