Annual Symposium 2013: "Religion and Human Rights"
BYU Law Review Volume 2014, No. 3
More than 80 distinguished delegates from 42 countries met in the 20th Annual International Law and Religion Symposium to engage in discussion of "Religion and Human Rights." Some papers from this Symposium, and other related papers, were published in the BYU Law Review:
Articles
- David Little, The Justification of Human Rights
- Andrea Pin, Does Europe Need Neutrality? The Old Continent in Search of Identity
- Louis-Léon Christians, Ideologically Oriented Enterprises Faced with the Reconfiguration of Ethics and Spiritual Management
- James Cleith Phillips, Law and Religion in U.S. Legal Scholarship: An Empirical Examination, 2008–2012
Comments
- Jared Hatch, Requiring a Nexus to National Security: Immigration, “Terrorist Activities,” and Statutory Reform
- Carl Hollan, A Broken System: Failures of the Religious Regulatory System in the People’s Republic of China
Conference Proceedings
- Sir Malcolm D Evans OBE, "And Should the First be Last?"
- Françoise Tulkens, Freedom of Religion under the European Convention on Human Rights: A Precious Asset
- Mark Hill QC, Tensions and Synergies in Religious Liberty: An Evaluation of the Interrelation of Freedom of Belief with Other Human Rights; Parallel Equality and Anti-discrimination Provisions; Enforcement in Competing European Courts; and Mediated Dispute Resolution