Religion and Human Rights: Competing Claims?Much has been written about the issue of religious freedom and church-state relations. The contributors to this book, however, take up another side of the question: what has been the impact of religion on human rights. Representatives from various religious traditions address a broad range of topics, from environmental rights to the basic validation of human rights, to the rights of women in India and Iran and within Orthodox Judaism, to the global imposition of criminal justice, to pressures for democratization within the Catholic Church in Latin America. The six major essays, along with their accompanying "replies" answer questions and raise issues in a provocative and compelling debate. |
ما يقوله الناس - كتابة مراجعة
لم نعثر على أي مراجعات في الأماكن المعتادة.
المحتوى
Ambiguities of the Divine | 3 |
The Basic Validation | 12 |
Human Rights Religious or Enlightened? | 31 |
Rights of Creation to Rites of Revolution | 53 |
Religion and Societal Change The Struggle for Human | 81 |
Cautionary Notes | 88 |
Secular Eschatologies and Class Interests of | 107 |
Women the Hindu | 117 |
Reconceptualizing the Relationships Between Religion | 140 |
Jewish Orthodoxy Modernity and Womens Rights | 174 |
About the Editors and Contributors | 199 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activism areas authority become believe Catholic church century challenge Christian church civil claims commitment concern Constitution continue countries courts criminal critical cultural debate discussion economic effective environmental equality Ethics example fact faith feminist force freedom give given global grounds groups Hindu Hindu Right human rights idea India individual institutions interests interpretation Islamic issues Jewish justice language Latin America liberation lives matter means moral movement Muslim nature offer organizations Orthodox particularly policies political poor positions possible practices prayer Press principles Professor promote protection punishment question rabbis reality recent regarding relation religion religious remains requires respect response ritual role secular social society status struggle theology thought tion tradition truth understanding University University Press violations violence woman women women's rights York