This publication, the 22 September 2009 Newsletter of the International Center for Law and Religion Studies at Brigham Young University, signals the beginning of a new era in communication with our colleagues around the world. For more than a year the Center has been busy updating and modernizing its websites and developing a new proprietary software that permits electronic newsletters to be more easily created from information already posted to any of our four sites. We hope that you enjoy this trial newsletter, offering in advance of the 2009 Symposium but a sampling of the Center’s activities since last you heard from us. Look for more information soon about past activities, current projects, and upcoming events.
With these new and expanding capabilities available to us, we now wish to solicit your active input on timely matters affecting international law and religion issues. Our websites are intended to become hubs where anyone can quickly and easily find the following information:
Already available on our www.iclrs.org website is the ability to access, in multiple languages, written, audio, and visual records of presentations delivered during our Annual Law and Religion Symposium. Our new database, www.religlaw.org, slated to be fully operable by the time of our Annual Symposium in October 2009, will allow users worldwide to quickly upload information that other users will be able to locate and search free of charge. We anticipate that this database will become an important resource for anyone with serious interest in law and religion subjects. Our new website www.strasbourgconsortium.org is developing into a premier vehicle for tracking and assessing information about the European Court of Human Rights and associated cases and issues. And finally, we are about to unveil our newest site, www.nepalconstitution.org, which will serve as a forum for analysis of constitutional issues in Nepal.
We hope you will find our websites and newsletters helpful. Please contact us at [email protected] with your suggestions and comments.
Warmest Regards,
Robert T. Smith
Managing Director
International Center for Law and Religion Studies at Brigham Young University