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Secular State Information

A secular state is a concept of secularism, whereby a state or country purports to be officially neutral in matters of religion, supporting neither religion nor irreligion.[1] A secular state also claims to treat all its citizens equally regardless of religion, and claims to avoid preferential treatment for a citizen from a particular religion/nonreligion over other religions/nonreligion. Secular states do not have a state religion or equivalent, although the absence of a state religion does not guarantee that a state is secular.

Contents

Secular states become secular either upon establishment of the state (e.g. The United States of America) or upon secularization of the state (e.g. France). Movements for laïcité in France and for the separation of church and state in the United States defined modern concepts of secularism. Historically, the process of secularising states typically involves granting religious freedom, disestablishing state religions, stopping public funds to be used for a religion, freeing the legal system from religious control, freeing up the education system, tolerating citizens who change religion or abstain from religion, and allowing political leadership to come to power regardless of religious beliefs.[2]

Not all legally secular states are completely secular in practice. In France for example, many Christian holy days are official holidays for the public administration, and teachers in Catholic schools are salaried by the state.[3] In India, the government gives subsidy in airfare for Muslims going on Haj pilgrimage(See Haj subsidy). In 2007, the government had to spend Rs. 47,454 per passenger.[4]

Many states that nowadays are secular in practice may have legal vestiges of an earlier established religion. Secularism also has various guises which may coincide with some degree of official religiosity. Thus, in the Commonwealth Realms, the head of state is required to take the Coronation Oath[5] swearing to uphold the Protestant faith. The United Kingdom also maintains positions in its upper house for 26 senior clergymen of the established Church of England known as the Lords Spiritual (spiritual peers).[6] While Scotland is part of the United Kingdom the Scottish Parliament declared Scotland a secular state but maintains the religious monarch.[7] The reverse progression can also occur, a state can go from being secular to a religious state as in the case of Iran where the secularized state of the Pahlavi dynasts was replaced by the Islamic Republic (list below). Over the last 250 years, there has been a trend towards secularism.[8][9][10]

List of secular countries by continent

States with no state religions States with state religions Ambiguous or without data

Africa

Americas

Asia

Europe

Oceania

Former secular states

Ambiguous states

See also

Look up secular in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Notes

Constructs such as ibid. and loc. cit. are discouraged by Wikipedia's style guide for footnotes, as they are easily broken. Please improve this article by replacing them with named references (), or an abbreviated title.
  1. ^ Madeley, John T. S. and Zsolt Enyedi, Church and state in contemporary Europe: the chimera of neutrality, p. , 2003 Routledge
  2. ^ Jean Baubérot The secular principle
  3. ^ Richard Teese, Private Schools in France: Evolution of a System, Comparative Education Review, Vol. 30, No. 2 (May, 1986), pp. 247-259 (English)
  4. ^ Haj subsidy has Air India fuming
  5. ^ Coronation Oath
  6. ^ Different types of Lords
  7. ^ [1]
  8. ^ Harris Interactive News Room - Religious views and beliefs vary greatly by country, according to the latest Financial Times/Harris poll
  9. ^ Summary of Findings: A Portrait of "Generation Next"
  10. ^ Secularization and Secularism - History and nature of secularization and secularism till 1914
  11. ^ Article 8 of Constitution
  12. ^ Article 2 of Constitution
  13. ^ Botswana - International Religious Freedom Report 2007
  14. ^ Leaders say Botswana is a secular state
  15. ^ Article 31 of Constitution
  16. ^ Article 1 of Constitution
  17. ^ Preamble of Constitution
  18. ^ Article 48 of Constitution
  19. ^ Article 1 of Constitution
  20. ^ Article 1 of Constitution
  21. ^ Article 1 of Constitution
  22. ^ Article 11 of Constitution
  23. ^ Article 2 of Constitution
  24. ^ Article 1 of Constitution
  25. ^ Article 1 of Constitution
  26. ^ Article 1 of Constitution
  27. ^ Article 14 of Constitution
  28. ^ Preamble of Constitution
  29. ^ Articles 10, 14, 19 and 21 of Constitution
  30. ^ Senegal - International Religious Freedom Report 2007
  31. ^ Appendix 1: Draft Constitution for the Republic of Somalia
  32. ^ South Africa - International Religious Freedom Report 2007
  33. ^ Article 19 of Constitution
  34. ^ Section Two of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
  35. ^ Article 8 of Constitution
  36. ^ Article 77 of the Constitution
  37. ^ Summary Honduras Constitutions (English)
  38. ^ Article 130 of Constitution
  39. ^ Amendment I of the Constitution
  40. ^ Article II of Constitution Sección 3
  41. ^ Article 36 of Constitution
  42. ^ Section 45 of Constitution
  43. ^ Preamble of Constitution
  44. ^ Article 20 of Constitution
  45. ^ Article 1 of Constitution
  46. ^ Article 20 of Constitution
  47. ^ Article 1 of Constitution
  48. ^ Religious Intelligence - News - Nepal moves to become a secular republic
  49. ^ Article 2, Section 6 of Constitution
  50. ^ Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Student & Home Electronic Edition
  51. ^ The Constitution of Sri Lanka: Chapter III - Fundamental Rights
  52. ^ "Secular Syria's veil ban – CNN Belief Blog". CNN. http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2010/07/19/secular-syrias-veil-ban/.
  53. ^ Section 38 of Constitution
  54. ^ Статья 11
  55. ^ Article 11 of the Constitution
  56. ^ Article 70 of Constitution
  57. ^ Articles 7 and 14 of Constitution
  58. ^ Article 7 of Constitution
  59. ^ Article 7.1 of Constitution
  60. ^ Article 20 of Constitution
  61. ^ [2]
  62. ^ Article 13(2) of Constitution
  63. ^ Article 2 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights and Basic Freedoms
  64. ^ Article 40 of Constitution
  65. ^ Article 2 of Constitution
  66. ^ Article 140 of Constitution
  67. ^ Article 60 of Constitution
  68. ^ Article 44.2.2º of Constitution
  69. ^ Article 99 of Constitution
  70. ^ Article 29 of the Constitution, Article 9(1) of Law 489/2006 on Religious Freedom
  71. ^ Article 14 of Constitution
  72. ^ Article 11 of the Constitution
  73. ^ Article 1 of Constitution
  74. ^ The Swedish head of state must according to the Swedish Act of Succession adhere to the Augsburg Confession
  75. ^ Article 2 of Constitution
  76. ^ Section 116 of Constitution
  77. ^ Section IV Article 2 of Constitution
  78. ^ http://www.parliament.uk/documents/commons-information-office/g07.pdf
  79. ^ http://www.parliament.uk/documents/commons/lib/research/briefings/snpc-00435.pdf
  80. ^ "Instant Indonesia: Religion of Indonesia". Swipa. http://home.swipnet.se/~w-15266/indons/instant/religion.htm. Retrieved 2006-10-02.
  81. ^ Yang, Heriyanto (2005). "The History and Legal Position of Confucianism in Post Independence Indonesia" (PDF). Religion 10 (1). http://web.uni-marburg.de/religionswissenschaft/journal/mjr/pdf/2005/yang2005.pdf. Retrieved 2006-10-02.
  82. ^ Hosen, N (2005-09-08). "Religion and the Indonesian Constitution: A Recent Debate" (PDF). Journal of Southeast Asian Studies (Cambridge University Press) 36: 419. doi:10.1017/S0022463405000238. http://eprint.uq.edu.au/archive/00002795/01/hosen-JSEAS.pdf. Retrieved 2006-10-26.
  83. ^ http://tunas63.wordpress.com/2009/10/11/tugas-dan-gungsi-menteri-departemen/

Categories: Constitutional law | Secularism | Religion and politics

 

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