Much has been written about the law as it affects new and minority religions, but relatively little has been written about how such religions react to the law. This book presents a wide variety of responses by minority religions to the legal environments within which they find themselves.
An international panel of experts offer examples from North America, Europe and Asia demonstrating how religions with relatively little status may resort to violence or passive acceptance of the law; how they may change their beliefs or practices in order to be in compliance with the law; or how they may resort to the law itself in order to change their legal standing, sometimes by forging alliances with those with more power or authority to achieve their goals. The volume concludes by applying theoretical insights from sociological studies of law, religion and social movements to the variety of responses.
The first systematic collection focussing on how minority religions respond to efforts at social control by various governmental agents, this book provides a vital reference for scholars of religion and the law, new religious movements, minority religions and the sociology of religion.
Arvustused
"With its broad scope, the publication is an ideal starting point for everyone interested in this specific chapter of the history of religions and the more general question of how religions and state authorities get along."
- Franz Winter, University of Graz
1 Fight, Flight or Freeze? Reactions to the Law by Minority Religions 2
Stand Up For Your Rights: (Minority) Religions Reactions to the Law in
Estonia 3 Jehovahs Witnesses and the Law: "Caesars Things to Caesar, but
Gods Things to God" 4 Scientology Behind the Scenes: The Law Changer 5 No
Stranger to Litigation: Court Cases Involving the Unification Church/Family
Federation in the United States 6 Legal Challenges Posed to the Unification
Church in Europe: Perspectives from a Unificationist Advocate for Religious
Freedom 7 The "Doukhobor Problem" in Canada: How a Russian Mystical Sect
Responded to Law Enforcement in British Columbia, 19032013 8 Making Sense of
the Institutional Demarcation: Tenrikys Response to Legal Environments in
France 9 Strategies in Context:Tthe Essenes in France and Canada 10 Reactions
to Legal Challenges by Aum Shinriky and its Successor Organisations 11
Religious Persecution and Refugees: Legal and Communication Strategies of the
Church of Almighty God in Asylum Cases 12 Minority Religion Reactions to the
European Court Of Human Rights 13 Minority Religions Respond to the Law: A
Theoretical Excursus
Eileen Barker, FBA, FAcSS, OBE, is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the London School of Economics, UK. She has spent the past five decades studying minority religions and social reactions to them. In 1988 she founded Inform in order to help enquirers with information that is as reliable, balanced, contextualised and up-to-date as possible. She has over 400 scholarly publications and is series editor of the Routledge Inform book series.
James T. Richardson is Emeritus Professor of Sociology and Judicial Studies at the University of Nevada, USA. He is a sociologist with legal training and has been researching new religious movements for five decades. He is the author of over a dozen books and over 300 articles in journals and chapters in edited collections. He has been a Fulbright Fellow in the Netherlands and a Rockefeller Scholar at the Bellagio Center in Italy as well as being an invited guest of universities in Europe, Australia and China.