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Faith in Law Peter Oliver

Faith in Law By Peter Oliver

Faith in Law by Peter Oliver


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Summary

This collection of essays explore the long-standing, intricate relationship between law and faith.

Faith in Law Summary

Faith in Law: Essays in Legal Theory by Peter Oliver

This collection of essays explore the long-standing,intricate relationship between law and faith. Faith in this context is to be read in the broadest sense, as extending beyond religion to embrace the knowledge, beliefs, understandings and practices which are at work alongside the familiar and seemingly more reliable, trusted and relatively certain content and conventionally accepted methods of law and legal reasoning. The essays deal with three broad themes. The first concerns the extent to which faith should be involved in legal decision making. Ought decisions to aspire simply to right reason or ought faith-based models of decision-making to be incorporated into the legal system? If the latter, how is this best done? Ought faith to operate simply as a reason itself or ought it to help to structure the method by which legal decisions are reached? The second, and perhaps most familiar theme, stemming in part from rights discourse, is the extent to which law does, and ought to, respect the rights of those whose religious beliefs conflict with the dominant social norms and practices. Liberal democratic constitutions typically provide protection for religion and religious beliefs. Are these justified, and if so how? Can such protection as exists suffice from the perspective of the faithful, or does law's otherwise pervasive agnosticism make this impossible or illusory? Thirdly, questions of identity and difference arise. Assuming that most societies remain a mix of many faiths (religious and secular) and no faith, how should law and legal theory understand the varying and, it must be said, conflicting claims for recognition. Should we encourage conformity in the hope of reducing friction, or should we preserve and promote difference, seeking to understand others, whether groups or individuals, without removing that which makes them distinct? More radically and controversially, should we be more sceptical of individual and group claims to authenticity and see them rather as strategies in an ongoing power game? Faith after all, like reason and law, has never been far from politics and intrigue, especially in its institutional representation. Contributors: Zenon Bankowski, Anthony Bradney, Claire Davis, John Gardner, Adam Gearey, Tim Macklem, Maleiha Malik, Victor Tadros.

Faith in Law Reviews

a set of challenging and exciting pieces of jurisprudential writingmust be on the essential reading-list for those who believe in laws ethical nature. Julian Rivers Ecclesiastical Law Journal June 2002

About Peter Oliver

Peter Oliver is a Senior Lecturer in Law at the School of Law,King's College London. Sionaidh Douglas Scott is a Senior Lecturer in Law at King's College London. Victor Tadros is Lecturer in Law at the University of Edinburgh.

Table of Contents

Introduction - Peter Oliver, Sionaidh Douglas Scott and Victor Tadros 1) Law as a Leap of Faith - John Gardner 2) Living In and Out of the Law - Zenon Bankowski and Clair Davis 3) Faith, Love and a Christianity to Come - Adam Gearey 4) Reason and Religion - Timothy Macklem 5) Faced by Faith - Anthony Bradney 6) A Comfortable Inauthenticity: Post-Theological Law - Victor Tadros 7) Faith and the State of Jurisprudence - Maleiha Malik

Additional information

GOR007820928
9781901362954
1901362957
Faith in Law: Essays in Legal Theory by Peter Oliver
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2000-05-01
160
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Faith in Law