17 Ecc LJ240
17 Ecc LJ240
17 Ecc LJ240
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240 BOOK REVIEWS
MICHAEL HOLDSWORTH
University of Birmingham
doi:1o.1o1 7/SO9 5 6618X1 5 0001 5o
acceptable default option for the overwhelming majority of its citizens' (p 183),
while providing reasonable alternatives for those who might object.
These and other essays in The Lautsi Papers are sure to spark fruitful debates
about religion, secularism and human rights in European classrooms, legisla-
tures and elsewhere. Such debates will become increasingly heated in other
parts of the world, too, as immigration, globalisation and secularisation all
bring major shifts to local populations and political attitudes toward religion,
tradition and culture.
JOHN WITTE JR
Center for the Study of Law and Religion, Emory University
doi:10.101 7/SO 9 5 6618X1 5 000162