Conference on State Neutrality and Religious Diversity
/On 22 March 2022, Hasselt University (Belgium) will be hosting the hybrid conference State Neutrality and Religious Diversity in the Public Sphere and Public Education in Europe.
The conference is co-organized by the Faculty of Law of Hasselt University and the Interuniversity Centre for Education Law (ICOR).
Confirmed speakers: Jenny Berglund, Malcolm Evans, Myriam Hunter-Henin, Merilin Kiviorg, Angelika Nussberger and Cathérine Van de Graaf, Roland Pierik, Julie Ringelheim, Stijn Smet, Jeroen Temperman, and Ilias Trispiotis.
Confirmed discussants and panelists: Jan De Groof, Effie Fokas, Juliane Kokott, Françoise Tulkens, Wim van de Donk, Ben Vermeulen, and Kurt Willems.
Registration is now open. The full programme can be viewed on the conference webpage.
To foster dialogue between senior and junior researchers working on freedom of religion and education law in Europe, the conference conveners also invite doctoral students to present their doctoral research at the conference, in the form of a poster. The call for posters can be found on the conference webpage (deadline: 15 February 2022).
Conference Abstract
Religious diversity is a sociological reality to which European states must respond. One prominent response has been insistence on state neutrality as a central principle of constitutional law. In most European democracies, the neutrality principle structures the relationship between state and religion. Yet, the relationship between state and religion is understood differently in different countries. Whereas some (eg France) enforce a robust separation between religion and state, others maintain a closer relationship between both (eg Norway, the United Kingdom). Most European countries are located somewhere between both ends of the spectrum (eg Germany, Greece, Estonia, Sweden, the Netherlands, Belgium).
Different understandings of the relationship between state and religion coincide with varying interpretations of the neutrality principle. Whereas some countries rely on an exclusive understanding of neutrality (eg France), others favour a more inclusive understanding (eg Germany). In other countries, still, it is not clear what neutrality means exactly (eg Belgium). Different interpretations of state neutrality in turn interact with sociological realities, in which (non-)religious persons engage with, adapt to or challenge the requirements of state neutrality.
Key sites of contestation remain the public sphere, in general, and public education, in particular. The interpretation of state neutrality has an immediate bearing on challenging questions such as: can/should religion be taught in public schools, can pupils wear religious dress, can the state allow religious persons to refuse vaccination, how should the state position itself towards non-believers, should ritual animal slaughter be banned, etc? These and other questions about the relationship between state neutrality and religious diversity continue to provoke political and legal debate, as contemporary controversies in a range of European countries show.
Against the above backdrop, this regional conference aims to further deepen our knowledge on two research questions: what does it mean for European states to be neutral; and how do/should European states respond to religious diversity in the public sphere and public education? To achieve its objectives, this conference brings together leading scholars from a variety of European countries and a range of disciplines (primarily law and sociology) to study the relationship between state neutrality, on the one hand, and religious diversity in the public sphere and public education, on the other, from a cross-disciplinary and comparative perspective.