Religious Diversity, Minorities and Human Rights: Gaps and Overlaps in Legal Protection
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Basis for the Current Approach: Religion and Human Rights
3. A Normative Analysis from a Historical or Diachronic Perspective
4. A Normative Analysis from a Current or Synchronic Perspective
4.1. The Political Principles Underlying the Management of Religious Diversity in Democratic Societies
4.2. The Current Regulatory Framework in the International Sphere
4.3. The Current Regulatory Framework at the State Level
- (A)
- In some cases, religion is presented as a legitimizing or justifying element of the political community or its organization. This usually takes the form of references to a supreme being or a religious reference in the preamble of a constitution or in another of its more symbolic or declarative clauses. This can be found, for example, in the European constitutions of Georgia, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Liechtenstein, Poland, and Switzerland.
- (B)
- In other cases, constitutional provisions govern the relations between religious entities and the state or some aspects of the internal organization of these entities. In most cases, these relations are limited to a single religious entity within the majority or dominant tradition in the society of a given state. On the European continent, this is the case with the constitutions of Malta (Article 2), Monaco (9), Denmark (4), Iceland (62), Norway (2 and 16), and Greece (3). Other constitutions, without mentioning official religions or churches, include references to the special prominence of one or more religious confessions. This is the case in constitutions such as those of Andorra (Article 11), Bulgaria (13.3), Spain (16), Georgia (9), Italy (7), North Macedonia (19), Poland (25), and Lithuania (43). However, some constitutions contain an explicit clause on the separation of church and state. These include the constitutions of Azerbaijan (Article 18), Portugal (41), Italy (7), Belgium (21), Poland (25), Slovakia (24), Slovenia (7), Albania (10), Bulgaria (13.2), Romania (29), Moldova (31), Ukraine (35), and Russia (14).
- (C)
- In almost all constitutions, religion is included in a list of legitimate options or interests to be protected, which usually translates into the explicit recognition of certain rights. Four main protected areas can be identified:
- Freedom of religion, which includes the freedom not to profess any religion. The provisions related to this right are worded in a similar way to that found in international treaties and are part of an overwhelming majority of constitutions.
- Prohibition of discrimination on grounds of religion or belief. This clause is also found in most national constitutions and is consistent with the clause generally contained in international law.
- The right of members of minorities to profess their own religion. Unlike the previous ones, this right, presented in different forms and applied to different groups (usually cited as religious communities or groups), only appears explicitly in a small number of constitutions, such as those of Croatia (Article 41), Serbia (44), North Macedonia (19.1), Albania (10), and Kosovo (59).
- Other rights that allude to religious elements in some constitutions. The most frequently protected areas linked to religion are those related to the right to education (constitutions of Andorra, Article 20.3; Ireland, 42; Netherlands, 23.3; Belgium, 24; Switzerland, 15; Finland, 15–16; Lithuania, 26; Poland, Article 53; Slovenia, 41; and Romania, 32), freedom of association (constitutions of Poland, Article 53; Liechtenstein, 39; Denmark, 67; Slovakia, 24; Croatia, 41; and Serbia, 44), and the right to marry (constitutions of Andorra, Article 13.1 and Lithuania, 38). However, this set of explicit references to religion is neither systematic nor widespread, nor does it have a direct correlation with international law (unlike the previous three).
5. Legal Instruments of Protection and Their Inconsistencies
5.1. Freedom of Religion as a Basic Right for the Protection of Religious Diversity
5.2. The Prohibition of Discrimination as a Protective Complement to Freedom of Religion
5.3. The Alleged Right of Members of Religious Minorities and Their Differential Value
5.3.1. The Additional Content of the Right of Members of Religious Minorities to Profess Their Own Religion
5.3.2. The Entitlement to the Right of Members of Religious Minorities to Profess Their Own Religion
6. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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Ruiz Vieytez, E. Religious Diversity, Minorities and Human Rights: Gaps and Overlaps in Legal Protection. Religions 2024, 15, 87. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010087
Ruiz Vieytez E. Religious Diversity, Minorities and Human Rights: Gaps and Overlaps in Legal Protection. Religions. 2024; 15(1):87. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010087
Chicago/Turabian StyleRuiz Vieytez, Eduardo. 2024. "Religious Diversity, Minorities and Human Rights: Gaps and Overlaps in Legal Protection" Religions 15, no. 1: 87. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010087
APA StyleRuiz Vieytez, E. (2024). Religious Diversity, Minorities and Human Rights: Gaps and Overlaps in Legal Protection. Religions, 15(1), 87. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010087