LEADER 04531nam 2201093z- 450 001 9910585941203321 005 20231214133634.0 035 $a(CKB)5600000000483070 035 $a(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/91138 035 $a(EXLCZ)995600000000483070 100 $a20202208d2022 |y 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurmn|---annan 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 10$aFreedom of Religious Institutions in Society 210 $aBasel$cMDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute$d2022 215 $a1 electronic resource (252 p.) 311 $a3-0365-2434-7 311 $a3-0365-2435-5 330 $aThe Religious Freedom Institute?s FORIS project, an initiative made possible by funding from the John Templeton Foundation, proudly presents, with the assistance of MDPI, this Special Issue of Religions with a focus on the ?Freedom of Religious Institutions in Society.? Its strengths lie in its global perspective, the acumen of its authors, and the wide range of subjects and complex factors addressed. This Special Issue volume consists of a series of articles written by leading religious freedom scholars and advocates, including Jonathan Fox, Roger Finke, Paul Marshall, Chad Bauman, Byron Johnson, Timothy Shah, Robert Hefner, Lihui Zhang, Rebecca Supriya Shah, Dane Mataic, Mariz Tadros, and Akram Habib. It contributes to the overall scholarship revolving around religious freedom by placing greater and well-deserved attention upon the crucial nature of institutional religious freedom and its key capacity to enable the enjoyment of religious freedom and human rights in general. Religious liberty is not an individual right alone, but rather includes the right of religious communities to gather in synagogues, churches, mosques, temples, and other houses of worship. Freedom of religion also includes the right of faith communities to establish religious institutions such as schools, hospitals, ministries to the poor, universities, and countless others that seek to embody the teachings of their respective religious traditions. Institutional religious freedom encompasses this full range of congregational and organizational expressions of religious faith. 606 $aReligion & beliefs$2bicssc 610 $aReligious freedom 610 $areligious institutions 610 $ahuman rights 610 $areligious freedom 610 $arights 610 $ainstitutions 610 $aorganizations 610 $afor profit 610 $ajurisdiction 610 $avocation 610 $aHindu 610 $aChristian 610 $alaw 610 $arestriction 610 $areligion 610 $aIndia 610 $aminority 610 $amajority 610 $alegal 610 $aregulation 610 $atemples 610 $achurches 610 $amosques 610 $afreedom 610 $avolunteerism 610 $aprosocial 610 $acrime 610 $apositive criminology 610 $adesistance 610 $aidentity transformation 610 $arehabilitation 610 $areligious liberty 610 $areligious organizations 610 $ainstitutional religious freedom 610 $areligious autonomy 610 $achurch autonomy 610 $afreedom of the church 610 $aW. Cole Durham, Jr. 610 $aIndonesia 610 $areligion in law 610 $acitizenship 610 $ainstitutional religious restrictions 610 $ainternational human rights organizations 610 $areligious restrictions 610 $aErastianism 610 $asecularism 610 $aJawaharlal Nehru 610 $aHinduism 610 $aHindu nationalism 610 $aculture 610 $aeconomy 610 $ahuman flourishing 610 $areligion institution 610 $aeducation 610 $apandemic 610 $aCOVID-19 610 $aminorities 610 $adiscriminaiton 610 $aCopts 610 $aequal citizenship 610 $aCoptic movements 610 $aEgypt 615 7$aReligion & beliefs 700 $aShah$b Timothy$4edt$01302226 702 $aBerkeley$b Nathan A$4edt 702 $aShah$b Timothy$4oth 702 $aBerkeley$b Nathan A$4oth 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910585941203321 996 $aFreedom of Religious Institutions in Society$93026272 997 $aUNINA