Religion in a Liberal State
Cambridge University Press, 8/29/2013
EAN 9781107650077, ISBN10: 1107650070
Paperback, 260 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm
Language: English
As religion has become more visible in public life, with closer relations of co-operation with government as well as a force in some political campaigns, its place in public life has become more contested. Fudged compromises of the past are giving way to a desire for clear lines and moral principles. This book brings the disciplines of law, sociology, politics and theology into conversation with one anther to shed light on the questions thrown up by 'religion in a liberal state'. It discusses practical problems in a British context, such as the accommodation of religious dress, discrimination against sexual minorities and state support for historic religions; considers legal frameworks of equality and human rights; and elucidates leading ideas of neutrality, pluralism, secularism and public reason. Fundamentally, it asks what it means to be liberal in a world in which religious diversity is becoming more present and more problematic.
Introduction
1. Religion in a liberal state Raymond Plant
2. The European Court of Human Rights and religious neutrality Ian Leigh
3. Religion and sexual orientation
conflict or cohesion? Maleiha Malik
4. Liberal religion and illiberal secularism Linda Woodhead
5. Moderate secularism in liberal societies? Derek McGhee
6. Excluded, included or foundational? Religions in liberal democratic states Veit Bader
7. Justificatory secularism Cécile Laborde
8. What lacks is feeling
Hume versus Kant and Habermas John Milbank
9. Arguing out of bounds
Christian eloquence and the end of Johannine liberalism John Perry.