Vito Breda’s ‘Sharia Law in
Catholic Italy: A Non-Agnostic Model of Accommodation’ in on SSRN:
The Italian Constitution and its
interpretation by the Constitutional Court have led to the development of a
model of accommodation of religious practices that seeks to balance a
commitment to promoting religious pluralism whilst, at the same time,
maintaining the neutrality of state institutions. What is distinctive about
this quasi-neutral constitutional stance is the commitment to reducing the
discrepancies between the legal and religious effects of key life decisions
(e.g. the decision to get married). I call this stance positive secularism. In
this essay, I would like to show that, thus far, positive secularism has been
particularly effective in accommodating the demands of Muslim immigrants
(Pacini 2001). For instance, some aspects of the Sharia law, such as marriage
(including some effects of polygamous marriage) and divorce (including some
effects of unilateral divorce), are already recognized by Italian international
private law. The second stage for the accommodation of Sharia law in Italy is
likely to be the recognition of Islam as one of Italy’s official religions.
Recognition will increase the level of the Islamic communities’ autonomy and
will allow for the automatic recognition of some aspects of Sharia law. In
February 2010, the Italian government established the Committee for Islam,
composed of representatives of Italian Islamic communities, within the Ministry
of Interior Affairs. In the recent past, these types of dialogues between
institutions and religious representatives have been the proxy for the official
recognition of nine faiths in Italy. Waldensian Evangelical Church, the World
Assemblies of God Fellowship, the Evangelical Baptist Church, the Lutheran
Baptist Church, the Apostolic Church, the Church of Jesus Christ of the
Latter-Day Saints, the Adventist Church, the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of
Italy, Hebrew Communities of Italy. The chapter is divided into two sections,
which is preceded by an introduction, and followed by a conclusion. The first
section will discuss the judicial introduction of Sharia law via the procedure
of Italian international law. The second section will explain the advantages of
the recognition process and the reasons that have prevented Islamic communities
from benefiting from it.
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