Summary: | Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Notes on contributors -- Introduction: Freedom of/for/from/within religion: conceptually inseparable rights -- PART I: Freedom for and freedom from religion -- 1 Freedom 'for' religion: (yet) another view of the Cathedral -- 2 The ministerial exception: an inquiry into the status of religious freedom in the United States and abroad -- 3 The ministerial exception: theological and legal perspectives from Finland and Europe -- 4 Freedom from religion in international human rights law -- 5 Is there a right to freedom from religion? -- PART II: Emerging social contexts -- 6 Immigration as an experience of fundamental rights and religious freedom -- 7 Health-care conscience and competing sexual liberty claims -- 8 Preventing religious fundamentalism through higher education of faith leaders -- 9 Religious freedom and places of worship: religious buildings in Europe and the United States -- 10 The religious precinct: the inequalities of equality law in religious property -- 11 Freedom of/for/from/within religion in prison: a taxonomy of the Strasbourg jurisprudence -- PART III: Emerging regional contexts -- 12 Islamic Preaching Board Laws of Kano, Borno, and Niger States: a constitutional and human rights assessment -- 13 Freedom of religious beliefs or religious freedom? The recent case law of the Polish Constitutional Tribunal -- 14 Christonormativity as religious neutrality: a critique of the concept of state religious neutrality in Germany -- 15 Freedom of religious conscience and persuasion: international law, domestic practice, and perspectives from Asia -- 16 Religious equality in the Peruvian Constitution -- Index
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