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- W3121636807 abstract "The philosophes of the Enlightenment as well as the founders of modern, positivist social science would have been astonished to learn that a distinguished group of legal scholars met early in the twenty-first century— in France of all places—to discuss religion and labor law. These pioneers of social theory, along with later thinkers such as Marx and Freud, had confidently proclaimed secularization as the master frame of the twentieth century.1 As a consequence of modernization, a shorthand term encompassing industrialization, urbanization, the spread of science and technology, democratization, mass education, and market economies, few of these seminal thinkers expected religion, a vestige of the ancien regime, to persist as a meaningful social force. If religious sentiment did manage somehow to withstand these corrosive social changes, most theorists were confident it would endure only as a private matter in the minds of a small remnant of believers, mostly people who were insulated from the processes that constitute modernization. Despite the differences among them, these social theorists could barely have imagined that technologically advanced twenty-first century societies would face claims from workers aggrieved that their religious rights had been abridged by employers or that these claims would frequently be sustained by the legal system. If the philosophes, positivists, and their heirs would have been astonished by the persistence of religious sentiment, they would have been even more surprised by its continuing relevance to law. Among its many meanings, secularization implied that religion would gradually lose authority in various institutional domains, becoming a specialized phenomenon operating in sharply circumscribed spheres.2 The law was one such institutional sphere that secularization was expected to empty of religious content. Driven by commitment to a “science of law” in place of legal formalism, legal scholars in late nineteenth century America" @default.
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- W3121636807 date "2009-01-01" @default.
- W3121636807 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W3121636807 title "Religion and the Workplace: A social Science Perspective." @default.
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