![]() |
Home
| Databases
| WorldLII
| Search
| Feedback
Edited Legal Collections Data |
Book Title: Research Handbook on Interdisciplinary Approaches to Law and Religion
Editor(s): Sandberg, Russell; Doe, Norman; Kane, Bronach; Roberts, Caroline
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Section: Chapter 7
Section Title: Law, religion and public reason
Author(s): Billingham, Paul; Chaplin, Jonathan
Number of pages: 21
Abstract/Description:
This chapter proposes that scholars of law and religion can learn much from debates over ‘public reason’ that have preoccupied liberal political philosophers over the past 25 years. The often highly abstract and technical character of such debates can make them seem remote from concrete legal questions. We seek to show, however, that they bring to the fore fundamental questions about both the relation between law and religion and the very legitimacy of law in a religiously pluralist yet increasingly secularised society, in which the majority of citizens, and many legal practitioners, lack familiarity with the character of religious belief and practice.
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2019/2575.html