Religious offence and human rights : the implications of defamation of religions / Lorenz Langer.
2014
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Title
Religious offence and human rights : the implications of defamation of religions / Lorenz Langer.
Imprint
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2014.
Description
1 online resource (lxii, 419 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).
Series
Cambridge studies in international and comparative law (Cambridge, England : 1996) ; 106.
Formatted Contents Note
The Danish cartoons revisited
Legal responses to religious insult
The current legal framework
Invention of new alternatives? : the concept of defamation of religions before and after the cartoons
Defining defamation
First principles : norms and norm-rationales
Norm-rationales for the regulation of speech
The religious rationale
Religion, its defamation, and international law.
Legal responses to religious insult
The current legal framework
Invention of new alternatives? : the concept of defamation of religions before and after the cartoons
Defining defamation
First principles : norms and norm-rationales
Norm-rationales for the regulation of speech
The religious rationale
Religion, its defamation, and international law.
Summary
Should international law be concerned with offence to religions and their followers? Even before the 2005 publication of the Danish Mohammed cartoons, Muslim States have endeavoured to establish some reputational protection for religions on the international level by pushing for recognition of the novel concept of 'defamation of religions'. This study recounts these efforts as well as the opposition they aroused, particularly by proponents of free speech. It also addresses the more fundamental issue of how religion and international law may relate to each other. Historically, enforcing divine commands has been the primary task of legal systems, and it still is in numerous municipal jurisdictions. By analysing religious restrictions of blasphemy and sacrilege as well as international and national norms on free speech and freedom of religion, Lorenz Langer argues that, on the international level at least, religion does not provide a suitable rationale for legal norms.
Note
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).
Location
www
Available in Other Form
Print version:
Linked Resources
Alternate Title
Cambridge Books Online.
Language
English
ISBN
9781139600460 (ebook)
9781107039575 (hardback)
9781107612204 (paperback)
9781107039575 (hardback)
9781107612204 (paperback)
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