Democracy and religion: Some variations and hard questions
By: Greenawalt, Kent
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BookPublisher: Daedalus Description: 149(3), Summer 2020: p.25-36.Subject(s): Religion, Democracy| Item type | Current location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Articles
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Indian Institute of Public Administration | 149(3), Summer 2020: p.25-36 | Available | AR124385 |
The ideas sketched here concern the non establishment and free exercise norms expressed in the U.S. Constitution, their application to governmental institutions from legislatures to prisons and the military, the place of religion in the curricula of public schools, and the proper role of religious convictions in lawmaking. A major concern of the essay is the problem of achieving an appropriate balance between governmental neutrality toward religion, as required by the non establishment norm, and governmental accommodation of religious practices that would otherwise violate ordinary laws, as required by the free exercise norm. A recurring theme is the complexity of the issues and the variability of possible solutions given differences in the history and culture of democratic societies. - Reproduced


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