Constitution Writing, Religion and Human
Rights
An International Workshop
June 5-7, 2014
Center for
Interdisciplinary Research (ZIF), Bielefeld, Germany
With the ZiF Research Group
“Balancing Religious Accommodation and Human Rights
in Constitutional Frameworks”
Workshop
organizers: Asli Bali (UCLA) and Hanna Lerner (Tel Aviv University)
What sorts of constitutional solutions could reconcile the
protection of human rights with the demand for incorporation of religious law
in contemporary democratizing or democratic states? In recent years, tensions
over religion-state relations have been gaining increasing salience in
processes of constitution-writing and amendment processes around the world. In
many of these cases, constitutional drafters struggle to mitigate conflicts
over religious law and religious identity, which are issues intrinsically
related to questions of human rights, gender equality and protection of
vulnerable minorities.
The workshop aims at advancing our understanding of how
constitutional drafters address these two goals - conflict mitigation and human
rights protection - and to what extent the relationship between them are
complementary or whether there is a trade-off between the two.
By drawing on comparative analyses of past and contemporary
processes of constitutional drafting where questions of religious law and
religious identity were at the center of debate, participants are invited to
discuss the following questions:
·
What is the role of formal constitutions in
managing conflicts over religious law and identity, and to what extent is the
relationship between religion and state designed outside of formal
constitutions, in the realm of ordinary politics?
·
How does constitutional ambiguity in provisions
related to religious issues reconcile the protection of human rights with
demand of religious freedom?
·
In what way does the process of
constitution-drafting affect the outcome of constitutional provisions concerning
religion-state relations (e.g., through selection process for drafters, rules
governing inclusiveness and decision-making procedures)?
·
In cases where constitutional debates involved
competing secular and religious perspectives, what types of human rights have
eventually been better protected by constitutional provisions?
We
welcome papers that explore the questions raised above from either comparative
or theoretical perspective. Papers presented in the workshop may either
investigate historical cases of constitutional debates on religious issues,
discuss more recent, or on-going constitutional drafting processes, or present
a theoretical discussion of these questions.
Travel funds and accommodation for
three nights at Bielefeld will be available for paper presenters.
This workshop is organized in
conjunction with the ZiF Research Group “Balancing Religious Accommodation and
Human Rights in Constitutional Frameworks.” Please visit our website
for more information about the group’s research, members, and events.
Please send an abstract of 400-500
words to Aaron Glasserman (aaron.glasserman@gmail.com)
no later than 7 April 2014.
Acceptance notifications will be sent by 20 April 2014.
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