Comparative Religious Law provides for the first time a study of the regulatory instruments of Jewish, Christian and Muslim religious organisations in Britain in light of their historical religious laws. Norman Doe questions assumptions about the pervasiveness, character and scope of religious laws, from the view that they are not or should not be recognised by civil law, to the idea that there may be a fundamental incompatibility between religious and civil law. It proposes that religious laws pervade society, are recognised by civil law, have both a religious and temporal character, and regulate wide areas of believers' lives. Subjects include sources of law, faith leaders, governance, worship and education, rites of passage, divorce and children, and religion-State relations. A Charter of 'the principles of religious law' common to all three Abrahamic faiths is proposed, to stimulate greater mutual understanding between religion and society and between the three faiths themselves.
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Product Details
Weight: 680g
Dimensions: 153 x 227mm
Publication Date: 15 Nov 2018
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781316617809
About Norman Doe
Norman Doe is a professor at Cardiff University Law School. He studied at Cardiff University the University of Cambridge and the University of Oxford and is a barrister. His degrees include a Ph.D. (Cambridge) D.CL. (Lambeth) and LL.D. (Cambridge). His books include Fundamental Authority in Late Medieval English Law (Cambridge 1991) Canon Law in the Anglican Communion (1998) Law and Religion in Europe (2011) and Christian Law (Cambridge 2013). A visiting professor at Paris University and the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven he was a visiting fellow at Trinity College Oxford (2011) visiting scholar at Corpus Christi College Oxford (2015) and visiting fellow at Jesus College Oxford (2018) and acted as a consultant on canon law to the Anglican Communion served on the Lambeth Commission (200304) and is Chancellor of the Diocese of Bangor. He is director of the LL.M. in Canon Law at Cardiff University.