In this article, the authors explore how active state support for religions and worldviews could be in accordance with the principle of liberal neutrality. They focus on the Belgian church-state policy because this policy is characterised by an explicit and extended form of active support for recognised worldviews. If this policy is in accordance with liberal neutrality, some other, weaker forms of state support for religions and worldviews may also be in accordance with this neutrality principle. In the light of these considerations, the authors make some suggestions about possible ways to bring the Belgian church-state policy more in accordance with liberal neutrality. |
Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy
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Editorial |
Internationalisering en naamsverandering |
Authors | Mireille Hildebrandt |
Miscellaneous |
Strafrecht en liberalismeOntwikkelingen rond strafrecht waarover liberalen zich zorgen zouden moeten maken |
Authors | Anne Ruth Mackor |
Author's information |
Article |
Hoe neutraal is kerkfinanciering?Kritische analyse van het Belgische erkennings- en ondersteuningsbeleid |
Keywords | liberalism, neutrality, church-state policy, (anti)perfectionism, Belgium |
Authors | Leni Franken and Patrick Loobuyck |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Article |
Arbeidsplicht, rechtvaardigheid en de grondslagen van het socialezekerheidsrecht |
Keywords | John Rawls, Stuart White, compulsory labor, reciprocity, social law |
Authors | Anja Eleveld |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The author argues that normative questions in social law are in need of a more philosophical approach. This is particularly true for the evaluation of Work-first arrangements. She proposes to evaluate workfare policies from the perspective of the reciprocity principle as it is deployed in the work of the liberal egalitarians John Rawls and Stuart White. While Rawls’ interpretation of the reciprocity principle seems to be at odds with Dutch jurisprudence on workfare policies, which allows for Work-first arrangements within the boundaries that are set by article 4 of the European Convention on Human Rights (a prohibition on compulsory labor), White’s approach rather encourages work obligations for welfare recipients, on the condition that citizens acquire individual drawing rights on collective participation funds. |
Article |
De Drittwirkung van grondrechtenRetorisch curiosum of vaandel van een paradigmatische omwenteling in ons rechtsbestel? |
Keywords | Drittwirkung, horizontal effect of human rights, constitutionalisation of private law |
Authors | Stefan Somers |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This article discusses whether the horizontal effect of human rights marks a new paradigm in legal systems or is merely a new style in legal rhetoric. In doing so, much attention is paid to the differences between direct and indirect horizontal effect. Departing from social contract theory the article explains that the protection of human right values in horizontal relations is an essential feature of modern constitutionalism. It also analyses whether these values in horizontal relations should be protected by private law or by human rights. This question is looked at from a substantial, a methodological and an institutional perspective. In the end, because of institutional power balancing, the article argues in favor of an indirect horizontal effect of human rights. |
Article |
De complexiteit van het kwaadEen kritische lezing van Hannah Arendts Eichmann in Jerusalem |
Keywords | banality of evil, Hannah Arendt, Adolf Eichmann, Holocaust studies, philosophy of international criminal law |
Authors | Klaas Rozemond |
AbstractAuthor's information |
In her book Eichmann in Jerusalem Hannah Arendt concluded that the Eichmann trial taught us the lesson of the ‘fearsome, word-and-thought-defying banality of evil’. Arendt explained the concept of banality as thoughtlessness: Eichmann did not realize what he was doing when he planned and executed the Final Solution of the Jewish Question in Nazi Germany. In this article Arendt’s analysis of Eichmann’s evil is criticized from an internal perspective: the conclusion that Eichmann was thoughtless cannot be founded on the information Arendt herself gives, especially her reports on Eichmann’s idealism, his knowledge of Kant’s categorical imperative, his Pontius Pilate feeling during the Wannsee Conference, and the two crises of conscience Eichmann experienced during the Holocaust. This information shows that Eichmann clearly realized what he was doing in a moral sense and consciously decided to go on with the Final Solution on the basis of his own convictions as a Nazi. |
Book Review |
Bruno Latour, The Making of Law. An Ethnography of the Conseil d’État |
Authors | Irawan Sewandono |
Author's information |
Book Review |
Mireille Hildebrandt & Antoinette Rouvroy (eds.), Law, Human Agency, and Autonomic Computing |
Authors | Mark Coeckelbergh |
Author's information |