Published in this edition are some papers from the Sixth Annual International Law and Religion Symposium, “Emerging Perspectives on Religion and Human Rights”:
Articles
Perspectives on Religious Freedom fiom the Vantage Point of the European Court of Human Rights, Willi Fuhrmann
A Preliminary Response to Criticisms of the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998, T. Jeremy Gunn
Is There a Measure on Earth?: Sacred Possibilities for the Secular Discourse on Human Rights, Mieke Holkeboer
Human Rights, Foreign Policy, and Religious Belief: An Asiaflacific Perspective, Pamela A. Jefferies
The Nature and Minimum Standards of Freedom of Religion or Belief, Natan Lerner
Religions, Human Rights, and Civil Society: Lessons from the Seventeenth Century for the Twenty-First Century, J. Paul Martin
Religion and Education in Bosnia: Integration Not Segregation?, Charles J. Russo
Applying a Gender Perspective in the Area of the Right to Freedom of Religion or Belief, Bahia Tahzib-Lie
Church and State in Western Europe and the United States: Principles and Perspectives, Sophie C. van Bijsterveld
Notes
The Coptic Church in Egypt: A Comment on Protecting Religious Minorities fiom Nonstate Discrimination, Scott Kent Brown II
Liberte, Egalite, et Fraternite at Risk for New Religious Movements in France, Hannah Clayson Smith
Zoned for Residential Uses”-Like Prayer? Home Worship and Municipal Opposition in LeBlanc-Sternberg v. Fletcher, John M. Smith
The Development of Religious Liberty in Chile, 1973-2000, Patrick J. Thurston
Public Lands Council 9. Babbitt: Herding Ranchers Off Public Land?, Julie Andersen
Uzbekistan: Islam, Communism, and Religious Liberty—An Appraisal of Uzbekistan’s 1998 Law “On Freedom of Conscience and Religious Organizations”, Grant Garrard Beckwith