Available Formats
Intolerant Religion in a Tolerant-Liberal Democracy
By (Author) Yossi Nehushtan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
22nd October 2015
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social groups: religious groups and communities
344.096
Hardback
232
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 14mm
547g
This book aims to examine and critically analyse the role that religion has and should have in the public and legal sphere. The main purpose of the book is to explain why religion, on the whole, should not be tolerated in a tolerant-liberal democracy and to describe exactly how it should not be tolerated mainly by addressing legal issues. The main arguments of the book are, first, that as a general rule illiberal intolerance should not be tolerated; secondly, that there are meaningful, unique links between religion and intolerance, and between holding religious beliefs and holding intolerant views (and ultimately acting upon these views); and thirdly, that the religiosity of a legal claim is normally a reason, although not necessarily a prevailing one, not to accept that claim.
Yossi Nehushtan is Senior Lecturer at the School of Law, Keele University, and Co-Director of the MA in Human Rights, Globalization and Justice.