Religious Liberty and Human Rights
Editor(s) Mark Hill QC
Language: English
Genre(s): Literary Criticism, Social Policy and Law
- November 2002 · 160 pages ·216x138mm
 - · Hardback - 9780708317587
 
This work includes papers of material presented at the Ecclesiastical Law Conference, 2001, which discussed the Human Rights Act of 1998 in relation to the Christian churches. Individual papers consider this theme in European and American law, the idea of human rights in relation to the concept of divine justice, the role of intervenors in legislation, how the judiciary approached disputes of a religious nature, discrimination in education and employment, and the theology of human rights. A major area that is discussed is the effect of the Act on employment law in respect of appointments to posts in churches and other faith bodies. Other examples which have already been the subject of litigation include demands for the exhumation of the remains of non-Christians interred in consecrated ground, admission policies for state voluntary religious schools, religious restrictions on marriage and adoption and planning decisions affecting sites.
Foreword The Archbishop of Canterbury; Preface Lord Justice Sedley; 1. Introduction and Overview; Mark Hill; 2. Human Rights, Divine Justice and the Churches; Nicholas Sagovsky; 3. A Christian Perspective on Human Rights; Roger Ruston; 4. The Challenge of Liberty for Religion in the USA; Mark Chopko; 5. Perspectives from Europe; Javier Martines-Torron; 6. Freedom of Religion: Public/Private, Rights/Wrongs; Ian Leigh; 7. Intervenors and Amicus Briefs; Simon Lee; 8. The Public Private Divide in Human Rights; Norman Doe; 9. Employment and Education; David Harte; Appendix The Human Rights Act 1998
Author(s): Mark Hill QC
Professor Mark Hill QC is a practising barrister and visiting fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge.