Italy, seat of the Pope and Vatican City, has a long and difficult
relationship with religious freedom. Often identified as a Catholic
nation par excellence, Italy owes its unification to a political class
that advocated the separation of Church and State. Home of the
Concordat, contemporary Italy recognises a peculiar notion of legal
secularism (laicità) as the supreme principle of its constitutional
order. Through the glasses of law, tracing the history of the right to
religious freedom from the Unification to the present day, the nine
chapters of the book allow an insight on paradoxes and contradictions
of a complex system made of unresolved stratifications where a strong
constitutional recognition of religious freedom is accompanied by a
weak legislative protection of religious pluralism and, at the same
time, a vigorous religious agency in the public space. Religious
freedom in Italy offers an interpretation of a model of religious
freedom that is not only a paradigm for many European experiences but
also a possible interpretative parameter to better understand the
dynamics of religious freedom between the two shores of the
Mediterranean.
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An Impossible Paradigm?
Product details
ISBN
9783110743715
Published
2023
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
De Gruyter
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author