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THE CLERGY IN KHAKI (E., Madigan and M., Snape (2013):238). THE JURIDICAL STATUS OF THE CHAPLAINS IN EUROPEAN ARMED FORCES

Emanuel Tavala ()
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Emanuel Tavala: PhD Lecturer for Canon Law,Sociology and Philosophy of Law Law Faculty of the University of Sibiu/Hermannstadt Lecturer Lucian Blaga” University of Sibiu “Simion Bărnuţiu” Faculty of Law

Jurnalul de Studii Juridice, 2016, vol. 11, issue 3-4, 23-41

Abstract: There is concern in many legal systems over the meaning and the implications of the term religion which the law contains. This concern is manifested in those borderline cases in which new religious movements come to the law seeking legal recognition as religious communities or groups. In this article we will deal with the presence of religion through the chaplains in the army, one of the oldest manifestations of religion in the society. We will not deal with the institution in the US legal system which is probably best organized and present with the troops all over the world. We will deal here with the European countries’ situation and laws. One commonality across most liberal democracies today is that their armed forces dispose of military chaplains. Religious freedom for soldiers who have enlisted or are drafted into an organization that as a total institution is not always capable of providing sufficient private sphere for such religious exercise is the main argument made in state-church regimes as different as the French, the German, the Romanian or the Dutch one. In the military, religious freedom is mostly defined as a set of rights to practice one’s religion including the right to access spiritual care. One specificity of the military is that in all these European countries the religious rights of soldiers can be limited if military arises. Second, if there is a right to access spiritual care, this spiritual care is not necessarily denomination-specific even though all of these liberal democracies dispose of at least two different chaplaincies. From this perspective it may not astonish that in France as well as in the Netherlands the Jewish chaplaincy naturally felt obliged to offer spiritual care to Muslim soldiers who accepted this service during times before a Muslim military chaplaincy was set up.

Keywords: military chaplaincy; European comparative law; religious freedom; secularization; freedom of conscience (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: A23 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2016
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