The Law and Politics of Freedom of Religion in Asia
12-14 December 2018
National University of Singapore, Faculty of Law
Jointly Organized by:
Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore
and
International Center for Law and Religion Studies, Brigham Young University
Call for Papers for Early Career Researchers’ Panel
The right to religious freedom is well-established under international law and is included in most constitutions in the world. However, the scope and content of the right remains highly contested in many Asian jurisdictions. While the right to freedom of religion is included in constitutional texts of most countries the region and the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion has been included in the ASEAN Human Rights Declaration, the way this freedom is understood varies widely among Asian states. This is complicated by the fact that Asia is one of the most religiously diverse regions in the world, and that religious freedom is understood differently in these different traditions. Furthermore, insofar as religious freedom is premised upon a particular conception of religion, its applicability to a non-Christian, non-Anglo-European context, may require further interrogation. A strong emphasis on state / government interests among many Asian jurisdictions may result in the under-valuation and under-protection of religious freedom.
Today, the increasing politicization of religion in the region, sometimes coupled with religious nationalism, has led to a politicization of the freedom of religion itself. The freedom becomes embroiled in political contestation among majority-minority groups: majority groups, striving to assert their privileged status, would seek to impose laws that restricts the rights of minorities to profess, manifest, and practice their religion. While such restrictions have been justified as necessary to maintain inter-group harmony, their effect has been to ensure a priority of one religion over others. The politicization of the freedom of religion further manifests itself in the use of the term to advance and resist restrictions on religious group rights whereby both the proponents and opponents of discriminatory laws employ the language of religious freedom to advocate their respective positions.
The National University of Singapore’s Faculty of Law and the Brigham Young University’s International Center for Law and Religion Studies is jointly organizing a conference to examine these broad trends. Participants will engage in doctrinal, empirical, and theoretical analysis on how religious freedom has been interpreted in Asian jurisdictions, how the state has regulated religion, and the underlying legal, political, and social influences contributing to the politicization of the right. By engaging with the Asian experience, the conference seeks to contribute to a broader examination of the politicization of religion and religious freedom in the world, while providing insights from Asia.
As part of the conference, we will be convening a panel of early career researchers to present emerging scholarship on the conference theme. Current graduate students and post-doctoral students (within five years of graduation) are eligible to apply. Please submit your application with your abstracts (no more than 250 words) and brief bio (no more than 150 words) here. The deadline for submission is 15 August 2018. Selected participants will have to submit their conference papers by 1 December 2018. Travel support will be available to selected participants.
Please direct any queries about the conference to Associate Professor Jaclyn Neo (NUS Law) at [email protected].