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Abstract

An introduction to a general discussion of the Canadian courts' approach to religious freedom, which argues among other things that despite their formal commitment to state neutrality in religious matters, the courts have applied this requirement selectively - sometimes treating religion as a cultural identity towards which the state should remain neutral and other times (when it touches upon or addresses civic matters) as a political or moral judgment by the individual that should be subject to the give-and-take of politics. Behind the courts' uneven application of the neutrality requirement lies a complex conception of religious commitment in which religion is viewed as both an aspect of the individual's identity and as a set of judgments made by the individual about truth and right. The challenge for the courts is to find a way to fit this complex conception of religious commitment into a constitutional framework that that relies on a distinction between individual choices or commitments that should be protected as a matter of individual liberty, and individual attributes or traits that that should be respected as a matter of equality.
Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2493863
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2493863
Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2493863
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2493863
Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2493863
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2493863
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2493863
... While the data suggest that faith-sharing occurs for the most part "nonviolently", it is imperative that we further interrogate how such "nonviolent" faith sharing occurs and how it is experienced by vulnerable populations with troubled histories with the Christian church. This imperative is further complicated by the details of faith sharing in Canada, including its legal and historical dimensions (e.g., see Moon, 2014); the differences between public and privately funded organizations; what it means when an organization has blended funding; and the role of professional and nonprofessional social workers. While we did not and were not able to explore these topics, it is worthwhile to note that a majority of the FBOs we surveyed were blended in their funding, i.e., received private donations from members of their faith community but also public donations from municipal, provincial, and federal sources. ...
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This article presents data from a mixed-method study on evangelical faith-based organizations in Southern Ontario, Canada. The authors sought to explore the nature and extent of faith-sharing in these organizations by using the Convergent Triangulation Design, which permitted the use of semi-structured interviews, focus groups, surveys, and document review. First, The Great Commission acts as a de facto institutional policy in the evangelical faith-based organizations sampled; The Great Commission is a Biblical injunction, strongly observed by evangelicals, which states that evangelicals are commissioned by Jesus to share and ultimately convert others to their faith. The second theme is that in seeking to realize The Great Commission these organizations tried not to be coercive in sharing their faith. In the discussion, the paper explores briefly some of the potential ethical issues that emerge from faith-sharing in social service settings.
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Schools should be places where all children are welcome to receive education. Yet sometimes they are a battleground for political conflicts amongst adults, as schools are often used to inculcate common values. It is therefore particularly demeaning for children to be excluded from schools. In Canada, children have been excluded from school on the basis of religious practices, thereby violating their religious freedom. Little legal scholarship exists on children's rights to religious freedom. This article reviews international law regarding the religious freedom of children in relation to education and then examines three legal cases involving successful challenges to the exclusion of students based on religion.
Chapter
This chapter begins with a summary of the factors that have made an historical contribution to fostering the diversity and dissent conducive to generating conscientious objections in a country with a distinctively Christian cultural heritage. It then identifies and examines some key principles, doctrines and definitions before beginning an assessment of what now meets the legal definition of ‘religion’, belief or ‘matter of conscience’ in this jurisdiction. It examines the developments in law and policy, relating to the initial recognition of incidences of conscientious objection, as a precursor to an outline of the international and domestic law currently providing the relevant legal and regulatory framework. This is followed by a review of the impact of fundamental human rights on dissent in general and on conscientious objection in particular. All of which leads to the main business of this and all other Part III chapters: a profile of contemporary national caselaw relating to conscientious objection; in accordance with those areas of social activity where the incidence is greatest; in order to identify trends, emerging principles and other characteristics that appear jurisdictionally significant.
Article
Lorsqu’il est question de reconstruction, il est question d’affirmation et de mutation des identités convoquées à une rencontre interculturelle. L’espace public s’avère le lieu de cette reconstruction pour plusieurs groupes religieux minoritaires. Le cas des huttériens est particulièrement révélateur de cette modulation identitaire dont l’État est un moteur. En ce sens, comment la rencontre du politique et du religieux s’avère-t-il un facteur de façonnement de l’identité collective des huttériens ? Nous cernerons théoriquement, dans un premier temps, ce qu’implique la reconstruction et comment elle peut s’effectuer par le plus haut tribunal du Canada. Dans un second temps, en utilisant deux jugements de la Cour Suprême du Canada comme sources primaires, nous montrerons comment l’État canadien permet cette reconstruction identitaire pour un groupe religieux minoritaire.
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