12 March 2015

ARTICLE: Timothy Lubin on "Hinduism and Law" (Legal History e-journal, Vol. 19, n. 29, 12 March 2015)


Timothy Lubin (Washington and Lee University, Washington and Lee University - School of Law) on "Hinduism and LawHinduism in India: Modern and Contemporary Movements, edited by Will Sweetman and Aditya Malik", 

Legal History e-journal, Vol. 19, n. 29, 12 March 2015. All information here

Abstract:
Beginning with a review of the interaction between religion and law in premodern periods, this essay presents in more detail the complex developments since the seventeenth century up to the present day. This includes the creation of ‘Anglo-Hindu’ law, colonial administration of justice (including the legal treatment of disapproved Hindu practices), and the gradual restriction of Hindu law to matters of family law; legal treatment of Hindus and Hindu institutions under secular law in modern India and Nepal; and Hindu religion under modern secular law outside of South Asia. Throughout, the emphasis is on the fruits of research in the last thirty years or so, especially current developments.

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