The role of judges in determining the meaning of religious symbols

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:The Lautsi papers
1. Verfasser: Scharffs, Brett G. (VerfasserIn)
Format: UnknownFormat
Sprache:ger
Veröffentlicht: 2012
Schlagworte:
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Titel Jahr Verfasser
The role of judges in determining the meaning of religious symbols 2012 Scharffs, Brett G.
Europe and the sign of the crucifix: On the fundamental questions of the Lautsi and others v. Italy case 2012 Koltay, András
Rethinking adjudication under the European Convention 2012 Zoethout, Carla M.
Crucifixes, classrooms and children: A semiotic cocktail 2012 Mawhinney, Alison
Back to the basics of fundamental rights: An appraisal of the grand chamber's judgment in Lautsi in light of the ECHR and Italian constitutional law 2012 Panara, Carlo
Neutrality in and after Lautsi v. Italy 2012 Evans, Malcolm D.
Freedom of religion v. freedom from religion : putting religious dictates of conscience (back) on the map 2012 Smet, Stijn
The Strasbourg Court and Article 9 of the European Convention of Human Rights: a quantitative analysis of the case law 2012 Ferrari, Silvio
Religious symbols in the public school classroom 2012 Temperman, Jeroen
Limitations of supranational jurisdiction, judicial restraint and the nature of treaty law 2012 Piret, Jean-Marc
The quest for neutrality and the stench of history 2012 Been, Wouter de
State neutrality and the limits of religious symbols 2012 Pierik, Roland
Neutrality and displaying religious symbols 2012 Ooijen, Hana M. A. E. van
Christianity, multiculturalism, and national identity: A Canadian comment on Lautsi and others vs. Italy 2012 Moon, Richard
Passive/aggressive symbols in the public school: Religious displays in the Council of Europe and the United States, with a special focus on Romania 2012 Andreescu, Liviu
Restricting the public display of religious symbols by the state on the grounds of hate speech? 2012 Liu, Hin-Yan
Alle Artikel auflisten