Law and Religion Headlines


Monday, 21 January 2013

Religion and people
(Rasul Bakhsh Rais, The International Herald Tribune)

We observe World Religion Day
(Manilla Bulletin Publishing Corporation)

Turkmen v. Ashcroft
(Center for Constitutional Rights)

“Liberty and justice for all”: Roe v. Wade’s betrayal
(Jim Graves interview with Robert P. George, The Catholic World Report)

Christians killed in North Korea
(Christian Today)

Denmark Queen forwards Hindu prayer request to Danish Parliament
(Eurasia Review)

Northern Nigeria - The conflict within
(Zainab Sandah, All Africa)

Why the anti-Muslim ads in New York City were not hate speech
(Abira Ashfaq, The Express Tribune: The Big Picture Blog)

Crosses, Undercover Cops and Rocknroll – The Human Rights Roundup
(Sam Murrant, UK Human Rights Blog)

Backed by state money, Georgia scholarships go to schools barring gays
(Kim Severson, The New York Times)

Religion and Law round up – 20th January
(David Pocklington, Law & Religion UK)

Bishop Thomas Paprocki’s letter in defense of marriage
(ChurchMilitantTV (YouTube), Talpa brusseliensis christiana)

Stanford Law Clinic: ‘To litigate and protect’
(Emily Belz, World News Service)

Military rules leave gay spouses out in cold
(Rachel L. Swarns, The New York Times)

America must protect religious freedom abroad
(M. Zuhdi Jasser, Fox News)

Books: ‘A Martyr’s Crown’: A wake up call to threats on religious liberty
(Robert Curtis, The Catholic Sun)

Saturday, 19 January 2013

Republicans use iaxpayer dollars to insert religion into public education
(Rmuse, Politics USA)

Friday, 18 January 2013

‘No varsity based on religion’
(Express News Service, The New Indian Express)

Apology to Pussy Riot might be reason for shutting priest out of church
(Yulia Ponomareva, Russia Beyond the Headlines)

Conway School District embroiled in church and state fight
(Jonathan Athens, Arkansas Matters)

Media Reports on the European Court rulings in Eweida and others v. United Kingdom
(Video Reports, Christian Concern)

Pakistan's envoy to US faces potentially deadly blasphemy accusation
(Fakkar Rehman and F. Brinley Bruton, NBC News)

Proposed Christian law school at Trinity Western under fire because of university’s anti-gay rules
(Douglas Todd, The Vancouver Sun)

Some Uruguayan doctors refuse to perform abortions despite law
(Malena Castaldi, Global Post (Thomson Reuters))

US officials call for Iran to release Iranian-American pastor
(Associated Press)

Nigeria detains suspects from military church bombing
(Reuters)

Violence in Mali, Algeria raises fresh fear of radical Islam
(Becky Bratu, NBC Worldwide News)

Ecclesiastical Law Journal - First 2013 issue now available
(Mark Hill, QC, editor, Cambridge Journals)

Muslims, Christians clash in southern Egypt over accusations in Luxor
(Haggag Salama, AP, Worldwide Religious News)

Israel’s Knesset set for record influx of Orthodox lawmakers after Jan 22 vote
(Allyn Fisher-Ilan, Reuters FaithWorld)

Tax court rejects Free Exercise and Equal Protection challenge to exclusion of Navajo clan relatives as children
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

Colo. civil unions bill could endanger Catholic child services
(Kevin J. Jones, Catholic News Agency)

Could Britain move away from EU and toward the Commonwealth?
(Ben Quinn, The Christian Science Monitor)

Secularism and Christianity
(Fr Alfred Micallef, The Times of Malta)

Legal Regulation of Religious Communities in EU Member States: A Human Rights Perspective
(Willy Fautré, Human Rights Without Frontiers)

Gideon Bible distribution in school causes conflict in NC county
(Don Byrd, Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty)

Egyptian court sentences Christian family to 15 years for converting from Islam
(Benjamin Weinthal, Fox News)

Reformed church organization granted corporate status in Germany
(World Communion of Reformed Churches)

Violence erupts after Mulsim protesters attack Upper Egypt Church
(Ahram Online)

Lawmakers' presence raises questions of religion and nationality for Hindus
(Deepti Hajela, Washington Post)

40 years after Roe v. Wade, abortion foes are winning -- and losing
(David Gibson, Religion News Service)

Methodist pastor Adam Hamilton to preach at inaugural National Prayer Service
(Daniel Burke, Religion News Service)

Creve Coeur passes funeral protest law targeting Westboro Baptist
(Gregg Palermo, Creve Couer Patch)

Catholic schools in Blitar agree to provide Islamic lessons
(Indra Harsaputra, The Jakarta Post)

Victims seek public release of documents in archdiocese bankruptcy
(Annysa Johnson, Journal Sentinel)

Press Release: USCIRF Calls charges against Iranian-American Pastor bogus, urges immediate release
(USCIRF)

USA: Egypt needs to do more on religious violence
(Reuters)

Thursday, 17 January 2013

On detention and beating of Orthodox Christians by Kosovo police
(Statement of the Department for External Church Relations’ Communication Service, Interfax-religion)

The "victimology" subterfuge
(Christine Williams, Gatestone Institute of International Public Policy)

The self-delusions of secular Jews
(Rabbi Eric H. Yoffie, Huff Post Religion)

Roe and religion: A surprising history
(Sally Steenland, Huff Post Religion)

Nigeria’s northern insurgency and the selfishness of the nation’s elite
(Emeka Mamah, Clifford Ndujihe, Okey Ndiribe & Dapo Akinrefon, Vanguard)

State Committee: “Fact of religious intolerance has been revealed in the books, which the Jehovah's Witnesses religious community attempted to bring to Azerbaijan”
(Mubariz Aslanov, APA)

Questions for the House of Laity (and the Church)
(David Pocklington, Law & Religion UK)

Chaplin, Eweida, Ladele and McFarlane: the judgment
(Frank Cranmer, Law & Religion UK)

Europeans launch campaign to declare life starts at conception
(Alessandro Speciale, Religion News Service)

Nationalism, religion a deadly mix in Balochistan
(Jafaria News Network)

Chechnya admin denies restrictions on religious freedom
(Interfax-Religion)

Citing religion, some health workers refuse flu shots
(Janice Lloyd, Religion News Service)

Azerbaijan: No legal place of worship for 40,000-strong town
(Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service)

Pakistani cleric, government strike deal
(Zarar Khan, Associated Press)

Study shows Bible courses plagued by insufficient teacher training, religious bias, poor instructional materials
(Texas Freedom Network)

Judge orders Russia to pay $50K per day in contempt sanctions
(Zoe Tillman, The Blog of Legal Times)

Wednesday, 16 January 2013

At once Catholic and secular, France debates gay marriage
(Steven Erlanger, New York Times)

Cleric return jolts Pakistan politics before vote
(Rebecca Santana, Associated Press)

Contraception coverage heads to high court
(Bob Egelko, San Francisco Chronicle)

Morsi’s slurs against Jews stir concern
(David D. Kirkpatrick, New York Times)

RI coalition rallies support for gay marriage
(David Klepper, Associated Press)

Vatican criticizes European religious freedom ruling
(Alessandro Speciale, Religion News Service)

Presidential Proclamation -- Religious Freedom Day
(Barack Obama, The White House)

European Court of Human Rights supports the right to wear a cross at work
(Sarah Ash and Nick Thomas, Lexicology)

Four get religious-liberty awards from First Freedom Center
(Graham Moomaw, Times Dispatch)

First Freedom Awards 2013: Rebiya Kadeer, Tad Stahnke, Eric Treene, W. Taylor Reveley III
(First Freedom Center)

Commission welcomes European Court of Human Rights ruling on religious discrimination cases
(Equality and Human Rights Commission)

European court rules religion cannot justify anti-gay discrimination
(Michael K. Lavers, Washington Blade)

Balancing Christian and gay rights isn't easy - give Strasbourg some credit
(Joshua Rozenberg, The Guardian)

Abp Mamberti responds to European Court of Human Rights judgement
(Vatican Radio)

ECHR: "Obsessive political correctness" trumps freedom of conscience
(European Dignity Watch)

End conditions that feed terrorism, Ban tells Security Council at day-long debate
(UN News Centre)

Hungary's "revival of the the cult of anti-Semitism"
(Soeren Kern, Gatestone Institute of International Public Policy)

Azerbaijan: Accountability for raiders through Baku and Strasbourg courts?
(Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service)

Anonymous to protect funeral of Reddit co-founder from Westboro Baptist protest
(Vincent Funaro, (The Christian Post) CP Tech & Biz)

Obama picks D.C. Episcopal priest to deliver inauguration benediction
(Lisa Desjardins and Eric Marrapod, CNN Belief Blog)

Rising religious restrictions around the world include wearing of religious symbols
(Pew Research Center)

Westboro Baptist Church gets permit to protest President Barack Obama inauguration
(Cavan Sieczkowski, Huff Post Religion)

Pakistan’s newest martyrs: Why anti-Shi‘ite violence may be the country’s biggest problem
(Omar Waraich, Time)

Aum successor wins damages, apology from Tokyo government
(The Japan Times)

How much Quran belongs in the classroom?
(Ariel Zirulnick, The Christian Science Monitor)

Muslims demolish church building in Egypt
(Mary Abdelmassih, Assyrian International News Agency)

15 years in jail: Egyptian family charged for attempting to restore Christian names
(Russia Today (RT))

Judge halts Illinois state mandate of contraceptives and abortifacients coverage in his HHS lawsuit
(Thomas More Society)

ObamaCare a drain on freedom: plumbing supply co.’s suit enters pipeline
(Kevin Theriot, Alliance Defending Freedom)

Cross will stay in parliament, Polish court rules
(Polskie Radio)

U.S. to mark 20th Religious Freedom Day
(David Ward, Deseret News)

Tuesday, 15 January 2013

Cross case nurse Shirley Chaplin plans to appeal ruling
(BBC News)

Kosovo: 56 Orthodox Tombstones Seriously Vandalized
(Draško Đenović, Centar 9)

International religious freedom: A human right for everyone
(Ben Rogers, Conservative Home)

Something to celebrate on Religious Freedom Day
(John Ragosta, Religion News Service)

Human rights panel: 'gay' trumps 'faith'
(Alex Newman, WND Faith)

Mixed religious-freedom rulings at European Court of Human Rights
(Catholic World News, CatholicCulture.org)

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The International Center for Law and Religion Studies maintains a Law and Religion Headlines service covering news about freedom of religion or belief internationally. All interested may subscribe to this service, free of charge, using the link below.

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