REGISTRATION OF RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES IN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54561/prj0401099f

Keywords:

registration of religious communities, religious liberty, church and state, separation of church and state, Council of Europe, European Court of Human Rights, European Convention of Human Rights, Venice Commision

Abstract

In the text regimes of religious community registration by statutory law in European countries is reviewed. Although freedom of religion is declared as a pricniple at the European level and individual constitutional provisions, varied obstacles to registering religious communities are set. They may reflect fear of abuse of religion or the intent to safeguard the hegemony of a traditionally entrenched religion. Some of these obstacles are historically entrenched, whereas in post-Communist countries they have been set during democratic reconstruction. States differ in conditions for registration, in bodies competent to act upon such supplications, procedures in reviewing them and in practice. A trend toward reaching the standards set by the Europeaн Convention on Human Rights may be discerned. The major policies of the Venice Commission regarding religious liberty and a number of standard setting judgments by the European Court of Human Rights, regarding religious liberty, particularly within the registration of religious groups are reviewed in continuation. These policies and judgments ensue from a strict vision of individual and collective religious rights and may collide with traditional religious cultures favouring an entrenched church, within various confessional traditions in Europe. These opinions and judgments present a limited but important instrument of affirmation of religious liberty and suppressing state arbitrariness in the treatment of religious freedom, particularly of minority groups and beliefs. Problems of Orthodox cultures are stressed.

References

Durham, Cole, Peterson, Nicholas, and Sewell, Ernest 2005, Introduction to a comparative analysis of religious association laws in post-Communist Europe, Laws on religion and the state in post-Communist Europe. Edited by Cole Durham i Silvio Ferrari. Leuven: Peeters.

Introvigne, Massimo, 1999, Religion as claim: Social and legal controversies, Pp. 41-72 in The Pragmatics of Defining Religion, edited by Jan G. Platvoet i Arie L. Molendijk, Leiden, Brill.

Madeley, John T., European liberal democracy and the principle of state neutrality, West European Politics, 26, 1-23, 2003.

Monsma, Stephen.V. and Soper, J. Christian, The Challenge of Liberalism: Church and State in Five Democracies, Oxford, Rowman and Littlefield, 1997.

Richardson, John and Introvigne, Massimo, Brainwashing theories in European Parilamentary and Administrative Reports, Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 40, 143-168, 2001.

Robbers, Gerhard (ed.), State and Church in the European Union, Baden-baden: Nomos, 2005.

Stark, Rodney and Iannaccone, Lawrence. R.,«A Supply-Side Reinterpretation of the 'Secularization' of Europe.« Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 33:230-252. 1994.

Internet sources

Judgments of the European Court of Human Rights were retrieved from the site: http://www.echr.coe.int/echr/Homepage_EN

Opinions of the Venice Commission were retrieved from the site: http://www.venice.coe.int/site/main/presentation_E.asp?MenuL=E

Downloads

Published

2010-06-10

How to Cite

Flere, S. (2010). REGISTRATION OF RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES IN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES. Politics and Religion Journal, 4(1), 99–117. https://doi.org/10.54561/prj0401099f