A draft of my new article Religion in New Constitutions: Recent Trends of Harmony and Divergence has now been placed on SSRN here and is available for free download. Here is the abstract:
The explicit
incorporation of Islamic principles in the constitutions of Iraq and Afghanistan
has highlighted concern over the past decade that theocratic constitutionalism
has become a rival to traditional liberal constitutionalism. Whereas liberal
constitutionalism ascribes religion special value but places it in the sphere of
the private through guarantees of religious freedom, equal protection of
religion, and non-establishment, the emerging ideology of theocratic
constitutionalism holds the potential to redefine all rights through the lens of
a particular religion.
This Article is an empirical study of whether, and
to what degree, liberal constitutionalism has been supplanted by theocratic
constitutionalism. Every constitution enacted since the year 2000 has been
examined, and its provisions relating to religion sorted into the following
categories: Preambular, Ceremonial Deism, Established Religion, Freedom of
Religion, Equal Protection of Religion, and (non-)Establishment Clause. Analysis
of the prevalence of these categories in new constitutions demonstrates that
most new constitutions display some evidence of both liberal and theocratic
constitutionalism.
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