Publication: Islamic headscarves: the other-religion effect and religious literacy at the european court of human rights
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Abstract
Islamic headscarves continue to be one of the most controversial
issues concerning Muslims across Europe. In order to analyse how
the headscarf is evaluated through the prism of human rights
values and moral principles in Europe, this article revisits some
headscarf cases heard at the European Court of Human Rights
(ECtHR). The weaknesses in the rulings have been widely
examined but this article will focus on the religious individual,
her agency, and the link between her and her associated group,
which have been less discussed in the literature. The article
highlights that the modern socio-political structure of the Council
of Europe countries is strikingly different from that of their premodern counterparts. Thus, the contours of religious groups, the
link between an individual and her associated group, and the
positioning of various religious groups vis-a-vis the state require a
set of approaches to a religious claim centred on the individual
believer. This can be clearly observed in the theoretical
underpinnings of the European Convention on Human Rights,
which, however, are not pursued adequately in practice because
the actual rulings not only involve logic but also include perception.
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Ünlü N., "Islamic Headscarves: The Other-Religion Effect and Religious Literacy at the European Court of Human Rights", ISLAM AND CHRISTIAN-MUSLIM RELATIONS, cilt.34, ss.1-21, 2023
