#Law & Religion UK » Feed Law & Religion UK » Comments Feed Law & Religion UK » same-sex marriage Tag Feed Law & Religion UK Issues of law and religion in the United Kingdom – with occasional forays further afield Law & Religion UK Search ____________________ Search Main menu Skip to primary content Skip to secondary content * Recent posts * Recent comments * Archives * Subscribe Tag Archives: same-sex marriage Post navigation ← Older posts Religion and Law round-up – 18th January Posted on 18 January 2015 by Frank Cranmer Reply Reflections on a week in which the Lords debated assisted dying and chancel repairs, the C of E published a “programme for reform and renewal”, SCOTUS decided to hear argument on same-sex marriage – and a court took pity on a cleric faced with disqualification from driving… Reform and renewal in the C of E On 12 January, the Archbishops of Canterbury and York wrote to members of the Church of England’s General Synod proposing a “programme for reform and renewal” for the church, outlined in their statement “In Each Generation”: A programme for reform and renewal. This preceded the publication of a series of documents proposing reforms to be published on the Church’s website this week ahead of the meeting of the General Synod, 10 to 12 February. Due to the range and volume of material being issued in relation to the various Task Group reports, there was a daily release of key documents this week ahead of the general distribution of papers on Friday 16 January. These have included: Continue reading → Posted in assisted dying, Australia & New Zealand, chancel repairs, chattels, Church of England, discrimination, employment law, faculty jurisdiction, marriage, same-sex marriage, weekly roundup | Tagged assisted dying, Church of England, discrimination, employment, faculty Jurisdiction, marriage, same-sex marriage, Wales | Leave a reply Religion and Law round-up – 4th January Posted on 4 January 2015 by Frank Cranmer 2 So that’s the carols and mince pies over for another year, then. Back to work… … but not before tonight’s Epiphany Carol services, when some choirs will take the opportunity to dust off the Crotch – Lo, Star-Led Chiefs, Assyrian Odours Bring – a sort of Pirates of Penzance meets Messiah. For some, the Christmas season extends until Candlemas; but now that The Low Churchman’s Guide to the Solemn High Mass has ceased its regular postings we will no longer be reminded of the evils of “prolix ritual and ostentatious ceremonial”. Abortion, blasphemy and the Constitution of Ireland The common law offences of blasphemy and blasphemous libel were abolished in England and Wales by s 79 of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008. In Ireland, however, Article 40.6.1°.i of the Constitution [Bunreacht na hÉireann] declares that “The publication or utterance of blasphemous, seditious, or indecent matter is an offence which shall be punishable in accordance with law”. In 1999 the common law offence of blasphemous libel was ruled to be incompatible with the Constitution’s guarantee of religious equality; but after a hiatus a new offence of “publication or utterance of blasphemous matter” was created by the Defamation Act 2009. The argument advanced by the Fianna Fáil Government was that it was necessary to have such an offence in order to fulfil the terms of Article 40.6.1°.i. To describe this as controversial would be a major understatement; and after the last general election, the incoming Fine Gael–Labour Coalition’s programme promised a Constitutional Convention to draft a range of reforms, including “Removing blasphemy from the Constitution”. Continue reading → Posted in abortion, Article 9 ECHR, assisted dying, blasphemy, civil partnership, CJEU, criminal law, ECHR, EU, faculty jurisdiction, Ireland, property, same-sex marriage, Scotland, weekly roundup | Tagged abortion, Article 9 ECHR, assisted dying, civil partnership, CJEU, criminal law, ECHR, faculty Jurisdiction, Ireland, property, same-sex marriage, Scotland | 2 Replies Law & Religion 2014 and 2015: retrospect and prospect – Part II Posted on 1 January 2015 by Frank Cranmer Reply To resume where we left off yesterday… Abortion and conscientious objection In December the Supreme Court ruled on Greater Glasgow & Clyde Health Board’s appeal against the judgment of the Inner House in Doogan & Anor v NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde Health Board [2013] ScotCS CSIH 36. The Inner House had overturned the decision of the Lord Ordinary [Lady Smith], who had refused the petition of Mary Doogan and Connie Wood, Greater Glasgow HB labour-ward coordinators at the Glasgow Southern General Hospital, for judicial review of the dismissal of their conscientious objection to supervising staff involved in abortions. In the Inner House, Lady Dorrian had justified a wide interpretation of the conscientious opt-out in section 4 of the Abortion Act 1967 because “it is recognised that the process of abortion is felt by many people to be morally repugnant … [I]t is a matter on which many people have strong moral and religious convictions, and the right of conscientious objection is given out of respect for those convictions and not for any other reason” [para 38]. The Supreme Court took precisely the opposite view. Continue reading → Posted in abortion, adoption, Article 9 ECHR, assisted dying, Church of England, civil partnership, employment law, Ireland, marriage, medicine & medical ethics, Northern Ireland, same-sex marriage | Tagged abortion, adoption, Article 9 ECHR, assisted dying, Church of England, civil partnership, conscientious objection, employment, Ireland, Northern Ireland, same-sex marriage | Leave a reply Religion and Law round-up – 21st December Posted on 21 December 2014 by Frank Cranmer Reply “Participating” in abortion, marking time on humanist weddings, first same-sex marriage under Scots law – and a hitch in EU accession to the ECHR.. Abortion and conscientious objection The big news of the week was that Greater Glasgow and Clyde Health Board won its appeal in the controversy over whether or not Mary Doogan and Connie Wood, labour ward coordinators at the Southern General Hospital and practising Roman Catholics, could claim conscientious objection under s 4 Abortion Act 1967 to having to supervise staff participating in abortions. Maria Strauss, an Associate at Farrer & Co, wrote a joint post on the case with Frank. Humanist weddings in England and Wales? The Sunday Times reported (£) that Number 10 was blocking proposals to provide for humanist marriages although the Lib Dems remained in favour. Understandably, the British Humanist Association was very disappointed indeed, not least because experience in Scotland (where celebrants are licensed rather than buildings) suggests that there is quite a strong demand for humanist wedding ceremonies. On Thursday the Government published its response to the consultation: Marriages by non-religious belief organisations. In short, though ministers don’t seem to be against humanist marriages in principle, they reckon that the law in England and Wales on licensing buildings for the solemnisation of marriages is so complex that “it is necessary to carefully consider the legal and technical requirements concerning marriage ceremonies and registration and the range of relevant equality issues”. So they have asked the Law Commission to conduct “a broader review of the law concerning marriage ceremonies”. In short: nothing this side of the General Election. Continue reading → Posted in abortion, animal welfare, assisted dying, conscientious objection, ECHR, ECtHR, EU, EU Treaty of Fundamental Rights, marriage, medicine & medical ethics, same-sex marriage, Scotland, weekly roundup | Tagged abortion, assisted dying, Church of England, CJEU, ECHR, ECtHR, EU, EU Treaty of Fundamental Rights, Islam, Judaism, marriage, Roman Catholic Church, same-sex marriage, Scotland | Leave a reply Scottish Bishops on Marriage and Civil Partnership Posted on 15 December 2014 by David Pocklington 5 Few outwith Scotland have commented on the guidance issued by the College of Bishops of the Scottish Episcopal Church in relation to the Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Act 2014: the provisions that come into force 16 December 2014 will permit same-sex marriage ceremonies to take place after 31 December 2014, i.e. after the current 14-day period of notice[1]. The Act also allows for the possibility of civil partnerships being registered in the context of a religious ceremony. There has been strong condemnation in some quarters of approach taken by the Bishops’ document and Continue reading → Posted in marriage, same-sex marriage, Scotland | Tagged marriage, same-sex marriage, Scotland | 5 Replies Religion and Law round-up – 14th December Posted on 10 December 2014 by Frank Cranmer 1 Advent 3, and only 11 shopping days until Christmas (and 47 working days until the Church Roof Fund deadline) The Law Society’s sharia practice note We have commented previously on the Law Society’s ill-fated practice note on drafting a sharia-compliant will, withdrawn with apologies in November. However, Legal Futures now reports that it has become apparent, as the result of an adjudication by the Society’s freedom of information adjudicator, that the note was drawn up without any input from experts in sharia. The relevant part of the adjudication reads as follows: “On 9 September the applicant wrote to The Law Society with questions concerning the recently published Sharia Succession Rules Practice Note (‘the Note’). He asked who the individual author(s) had been [and] whether any religious organisations or lobbyists had been consulted before the decision to publish the Note … The Society said that no ‘Sharia Law experts’ had been consulted and that no external individuals or organisations had lobbied the Society or been involved in drafting the Note” [our emphasis]. Continue reading → Posted in abortion, animal welfare, Article 9 ECHR, Church of England, constitution, Islam, Northern Ireland, same-sex marriage, sharia, weekly roundup | Tagged abortion, animal welfare, Article 9 ECHR, constitution, Islam, Northern Ireland, same-sex marriage, sharia | 1 Reply “Conversion Wednesday” – one week to go Posted on 3 December 2014 by David Pocklington Reply In contrast to the “Quiet Wednesday . . . antidote to Black Friday and Cyber Monday” planned for 10 December at St Mary’s Cathedral, Glasgow, register offices in England and Wales will be expecting a “Busy Wednesday” as couples in a civil partnership take this first opportunity for its conversion to a marriage. The secondary legislation necessary for this part of the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013 to come into force received parliamentary approval on 10 November, when the Minister for Skills and Equalities (Nick Boles) outlined the implications of these measures to the First Delegated Legislation Committee. Continue reading → Posted in Church of England, civil partnership, England & Wales, same-sex marriage, Scotland | Tagged Church of England, civil partnership, England & Wales, marriage, same-sex marriage, Scotland | Leave a reply Post navigation ← Older posts CAPTION: January 2015 S M T W T F S « Dec 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Search ____________________ Search Recent Posts * Religion and Law round-up – 25th January * Manorial rights: Justice Committee report * Religious discrimination and the Ministry of Justice: a quick look at religious dress and discrimination * Lords Spiritual (Women) Bill completes Commons stages * Local Government (Religious etc. Observances) Bill * House of Lords debates chancel repair liability * Religion and Law round-up – 18th January * Blogging, campaigning and the General Election * Calling the banns in Scotland? – on reflection, maybe not * CofE Simplification Report – Key Recommendations * Wi-Fi in churches – evidence, system security and commercial considerations * Archbishops propose programme of reform and renewal * Religion and Law round-up – 11th January * Sham marriage/civil partnership and the law: update * Wi-Fi in churches – health effects, courts’ jurisdiction and locus standi * Channel Islands episcopal oversight * CofE services after suicide * How relevant to the UK is US case-law on religion? * Religion and Law round-up – 4th January * End of Year Quiz – 2014: the Answers Recent Comments * Religion and Law round-up – 25th January | Law & Religion UK on Religion and law round up – 16th November * Religion and Law round-up – 25th January | Law & Religion UK on Religious discrimination and the Ministry of Justice: a quick look at religious dress and discrimination * Religion and Law round-up – 25th January | Law & Religion UK on Manorial rights: Justice Committee report * Asociación para la Defensa de la Libertad Religiosa » Titulares Internacionales de Libertad Religiosa del 15 enero 2015 on CofE Simplification Report – Key Recommendations * BBC Panorama: Secrets of Britain’s Sharia Councils | Multiculturalismo y pluralismo jurídico on Sharia and the English legal system: the Government’s view Archives [Select Month________] Top Posts & Pages * Manorial rights: Justice Committee report * “Religious” content of civil marriage ceremonies * Recent posts * Religion and Law round-up – 18th January * House of Lords debates chancel repair liability Blogroll * British Religion in Numbers * Center for Law and Religion, St. John’s U School of Law * Current Awareness from the Inner Temple Library * Ecclesiastical Law (Philip Jones) * ECHR Blog * Erasmus * European Courts * Human Rights in Ireland * In the Light of the Law * LARSN Case Database * Law and Religion Australia * Multiculturalismo y pluralismo jurídico * ObiterJ * PluRel – a blog about religion and society * Religion Clause * Religion Law Blog (Neil Addison) * Religion – Weltanschauung – Recht [Religion – Belief – Law] * Strasbourg Consortium * The Digital Nun * Thinking Anglicans * ThinkRights * UK Human Rights Blog * UK Supreme Court Blog * [Roman Catholic] Canon Law Made Easy * [the other] Cranmer blog Search ____________________ Search Subscribe to Blog via Email Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email. 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