State must be secular so that society can be religious
State must be secular so that society can be religious
Report knowledge programme conference 'Rethinking Secularism'
Tags: India
In many parts of the world religion is on an upsurge. Religious revivalism and emergent forms of fundamentalisms challenge the capacity of the state to deal with religious diversity. The Hivos-Kosmopolis conference 'Rethinking secularism' (25-26 May, Utrecht, NL) brought together academics, activists, legal experts and policy makers from various parts of the world to debate the future of secularism. Among them: Sudanese thinker and activist Abdullahi An-Na'im and Justice Aftab Alam, sitting judge of the Supreme Court of India.
You can read the report of the conference here.