Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1008837
Still Fighting God in the Public Arena: Does Europe Pursue the Separation of Religion and State Too Devoutly or Is It Saying It Does Without Really Meaning It?
Still Fighting God in the Public Arena: Does Europe Pursue the Separation of Religion and State Too Devoutly or Is It Saying It Does Without Really Meaning It? // BYU Law Review, 2015 (2015), 3; 679-726 (podatak o recenziji nije dostupan, članak, znanstveni)
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Naslov
Still Fighting God in the Public Arena: Does Europe Pursue the Separation of Religion and State Too Devoutly or Is It Saying It Does Without Really Meaning It?
Autori
Savić, Vanja-Ivan
Izvornik
BYU Law Review (0360-151X) 2015
(2015), 3;
679-726
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u časopisima, članak, znanstveni
Ključne riječi
law, religion, Europe, public space
Sažetak
The practice of the full protection of human rights requests full protection of the religious life and religious freedoms which possess pure essence of those same rights. Denying formative elements which constitute the system of human rights in full, can lead to serious even tectonic disruptions of the legal system which is built upon them. Amalgamation of human rights with public order and public morals could lead to the solution of the protection of higher values together with protection of necessary values. Necessary Values are those who are connected with the life of the legal system itself and without them legal system would lose its distinctive element of existence. If religion has its distinctive place in the society or at least if religious beliefs influenced legal system in which are rooted, all subjects have to respect it and find their way of maneuvering even trough high waters of those which some could sometimes feel distant and ‘not their own’.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski