The Conscience Wars
Herausgeber: Mancini, Susanna; Rosenfeld, Michel
The Conscience Wars
Herausgeber: Mancini, Susanna; Rosenfeld, Michel
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Explores the multifaceted debate on the interconnection between conscientious objections, religious liberty, and the equality of women and sexual minorities.
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Explores the multifaceted debate on the interconnection between conscientious objections, religious liberty, and the equality of women and sexual minorities.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 513
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. August 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9781316625828
- ISBN-10: 1316625826
- Artikelnr.: 57380867
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 513
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. August 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9781316625828
- ISBN-10: 1316625826
- Artikelnr.: 57380867
Introduction: the new generation of conscience objections in legal,
political and cultural context Susanna Mancini and Michel Rosenfeld; Part
I. Conscientious Objection in a Constitutional Democracy: Theoretical
Perspectives: 1. Conscience and its claims: a philosophical history of
conscientious objection Julie Saada and Mark Antaki; 2. The conscience wars
in historical and philosophical perspective: the clash between religious
absolutes and democratic pluralism Michel Rosenfeld; 3. Conscientious
objections Bernard Schlink; 4. Egalitarian justice and religious exemptions
Cécile Laborde; 5. Is there a right to conscientious objection? Lorenzo
Zucca; 6. Affect and the theo-political economy of the right to freedom of
'thought, conscience and religion' Marinos Diamantides; Part II.
Conscientious Objection or Culture Wars? The Changing Discourse of
Religious Liberty Claims: 7. Conscience wars in transnational perspective:
religious liberty, third-party harm, and pluralism Reva Siegel and Douglas
NeJaime; 8. Transatlantic conversations: the emergence of
society-protective anti-abortion arguments in the United States, Europe and
Russia Susanna Mancini and Kristina Stoeckl; 9. The geopolitics of
transnational law and religion: wars of conscience and the framing effects
of law as a social institution Pasquale Annicchino; Part III. Objecting to
Anti-Discrimination Laws in the Name of Mainstream Religious Convictions:
Striking a Balance between Freedom and Equality: 10. Objections to
antidiscrimination in the name of conscience or religion: a conflicting
rights approach Eva Brems; 11. The role of the European Court of Human
Rights in adjudicating religious exception claims Helen Keller and Corina
Heri; 12. When do religious accommodations burden others? Nelson Tebbe,
Micah Schwartzman and Richard Schragger; Part IV. Conscience, Accommodation
and its Harms: Children, Women and Sexual Minorities: 13. The missing
children in elite legal scholarship Marci A. Hamilton; 14. Religious
refusals and reproductive rights: claims of conscience as discrimination
and shaming Louise Melling; 15. Seeking to square the circle: a sustainable
conscientious objection in reproductive healthcare Emmanuelle Bribosia and
Isabelle Rorive; 16. Marriage registrars, same sex relationships, and
religious discrimination in the European Court of Human Rights Christopher
McCrudden; Part V. Concluding Perspectives on the Conscience Wars: 17.
Mission still impossible Stanley Fish; 18. The politics of religion:
democracy and the conscience wars Robert Post.
political and cultural context Susanna Mancini and Michel Rosenfeld; Part
I. Conscientious Objection in a Constitutional Democracy: Theoretical
Perspectives: 1. Conscience and its claims: a philosophical history of
conscientious objection Julie Saada and Mark Antaki; 2. The conscience wars
in historical and philosophical perspective: the clash between religious
absolutes and democratic pluralism Michel Rosenfeld; 3. Conscientious
objections Bernard Schlink; 4. Egalitarian justice and religious exemptions
Cécile Laborde; 5. Is there a right to conscientious objection? Lorenzo
Zucca; 6. Affect and the theo-political economy of the right to freedom of
'thought, conscience and religion' Marinos Diamantides; Part II.
Conscientious Objection or Culture Wars? The Changing Discourse of
Religious Liberty Claims: 7. Conscience wars in transnational perspective:
religious liberty, third-party harm, and pluralism Reva Siegel and Douglas
NeJaime; 8. Transatlantic conversations: the emergence of
society-protective anti-abortion arguments in the United States, Europe and
Russia Susanna Mancini and Kristina Stoeckl; 9. The geopolitics of
transnational law and religion: wars of conscience and the framing effects
of law as a social institution Pasquale Annicchino; Part III. Objecting to
Anti-Discrimination Laws in the Name of Mainstream Religious Convictions:
Striking a Balance between Freedom and Equality: 10. Objections to
antidiscrimination in the name of conscience or religion: a conflicting
rights approach Eva Brems; 11. The role of the European Court of Human
Rights in adjudicating religious exception claims Helen Keller and Corina
Heri; 12. When do religious accommodations burden others? Nelson Tebbe,
Micah Schwartzman and Richard Schragger; Part IV. Conscience, Accommodation
and its Harms: Children, Women and Sexual Minorities: 13. The missing
children in elite legal scholarship Marci A. Hamilton; 14. Religious
refusals and reproductive rights: claims of conscience as discrimination
and shaming Louise Melling; 15. Seeking to square the circle: a sustainable
conscientious objection in reproductive healthcare Emmanuelle Bribosia and
Isabelle Rorive; 16. Marriage registrars, same sex relationships, and
religious discrimination in the European Court of Human Rights Christopher
McCrudden; Part V. Concluding Perspectives on the Conscience Wars: 17.
Mission still impossible Stanley Fish; 18. The politics of religion:
democracy and the conscience wars Robert Post.
Introduction: the new generation of conscience objections in legal,
political and cultural context Susanna Mancini and Michel Rosenfeld; Part
I. Conscientious Objection in a Constitutional Democracy: Theoretical
Perspectives: 1. Conscience and its claims: a philosophical history of
conscientious objection Julie Saada and Mark Antaki; 2. The conscience wars
in historical and philosophical perspective: the clash between religious
absolutes and democratic pluralism Michel Rosenfeld; 3. Conscientious
objections Bernard Schlink; 4. Egalitarian justice and religious exemptions
Cécile Laborde; 5. Is there a right to conscientious objection? Lorenzo
Zucca; 6. Affect and the theo-political economy of the right to freedom of
'thought, conscience and religion' Marinos Diamantides; Part II.
Conscientious Objection or Culture Wars? The Changing Discourse of
Religious Liberty Claims: 7. Conscience wars in transnational perspective:
religious liberty, third-party harm, and pluralism Reva Siegel and Douglas
NeJaime; 8. Transatlantic conversations: the emergence of
society-protective anti-abortion arguments in the United States, Europe and
Russia Susanna Mancini and Kristina Stoeckl; 9. The geopolitics of
transnational law and religion: wars of conscience and the framing effects
of law as a social institution Pasquale Annicchino; Part III. Objecting to
Anti-Discrimination Laws in the Name of Mainstream Religious Convictions:
Striking a Balance between Freedom and Equality: 10. Objections to
antidiscrimination in the name of conscience or religion: a conflicting
rights approach Eva Brems; 11. The role of the European Court of Human
Rights in adjudicating religious exception claims Helen Keller and Corina
Heri; 12. When do religious accommodations burden others? Nelson Tebbe,
Micah Schwartzman and Richard Schragger; Part IV. Conscience, Accommodation
and its Harms: Children, Women and Sexual Minorities: 13. The missing
children in elite legal scholarship Marci A. Hamilton; 14. Religious
refusals and reproductive rights: claims of conscience as discrimination
and shaming Louise Melling; 15. Seeking to square the circle: a sustainable
conscientious objection in reproductive healthcare Emmanuelle Bribosia and
Isabelle Rorive; 16. Marriage registrars, same sex relationships, and
religious discrimination in the European Court of Human Rights Christopher
McCrudden; Part V. Concluding Perspectives on the Conscience Wars: 17.
Mission still impossible Stanley Fish; 18. The politics of religion:
democracy and the conscience wars Robert Post.
political and cultural context Susanna Mancini and Michel Rosenfeld; Part
I. Conscientious Objection in a Constitutional Democracy: Theoretical
Perspectives: 1. Conscience and its claims: a philosophical history of
conscientious objection Julie Saada and Mark Antaki; 2. The conscience wars
in historical and philosophical perspective: the clash between religious
absolutes and democratic pluralism Michel Rosenfeld; 3. Conscientious
objections Bernard Schlink; 4. Egalitarian justice and religious exemptions
Cécile Laborde; 5. Is there a right to conscientious objection? Lorenzo
Zucca; 6. Affect and the theo-political economy of the right to freedom of
'thought, conscience and religion' Marinos Diamantides; Part II.
Conscientious Objection or Culture Wars? The Changing Discourse of
Religious Liberty Claims: 7. Conscience wars in transnational perspective:
religious liberty, third-party harm, and pluralism Reva Siegel and Douglas
NeJaime; 8. Transatlantic conversations: the emergence of
society-protective anti-abortion arguments in the United States, Europe and
Russia Susanna Mancini and Kristina Stoeckl; 9. The geopolitics of
transnational law and religion: wars of conscience and the framing effects
of law as a social institution Pasquale Annicchino; Part III. Objecting to
Anti-Discrimination Laws in the Name of Mainstream Religious Convictions:
Striking a Balance between Freedom and Equality: 10. Objections to
antidiscrimination in the name of conscience or religion: a conflicting
rights approach Eva Brems; 11. The role of the European Court of Human
Rights in adjudicating religious exception claims Helen Keller and Corina
Heri; 12. When do religious accommodations burden others? Nelson Tebbe,
Micah Schwartzman and Richard Schragger; Part IV. Conscience, Accommodation
and its Harms: Children, Women and Sexual Minorities: 13. The missing
children in elite legal scholarship Marci A. Hamilton; 14. Religious
refusals and reproductive rights: claims of conscience as discrimination
and shaming Louise Melling; 15. Seeking to square the circle: a sustainable
conscientious objection in reproductive healthcare Emmanuelle Bribosia and
Isabelle Rorive; 16. Marriage registrars, same sex relationships, and
religious discrimination in the European Court of Human Rights Christopher
McCrudden; Part V. Concluding Perspectives on the Conscience Wars: 17.
Mission still impossible Stanley Fish; 18. The politics of religion:
democracy and the conscience wars Robert Post.