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Islamopedia: Mapping Islamic Thinking Online
November 30, 2009
Jocelyne Cesari of Harvard University will present Islamopedia, a collection of rulings and religious... |
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The Role of Religion in the Public Square of a Pluralist Democracy
December 14, 2009
Clergy Beyond Borders will be holding a conference at American University on the topic of "Human Righ... |
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Berkley Center Annual Report 2008-2009
October 15, 2009
This report outlines the Berkley Center's major activities during the 2008–09 academic year, includ |
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Luce/SFS Program Annual Report 2008-2009
October 15, 2009
This report provides an overview of the Luce/SFS Program on Religion and International Affairs progr |
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The Future of U.S. International Religious Freedom Policy: Recommendations for the Obama Administration
March 10, 2009
Building off three symposia on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the International Religious F |
The relationship between religion and politics has been a central aspect of Mexican history. The Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire (1519-21) was an imperial venture with economic and political objectives, but found its official sanction in the desire to establish the Catholic Church throughout this vast territory. Over the next two centuries, the Church acted as the primary provider of social services and also amassed enormous power and wealth as the single largest landholder in Mexico. Its dominant position in Spain’s wealthiest colony brought Church-State relations to the center of the political struggles that shook Mexico during and after independence. Liberals, inspired by the ideals of the French and American Revolutions, were generally anti-clerical, while Conservatives defended Church prerogatives and privileges. Liberals and Conservatives alternated in power during the period from the War of Independence (1810-21) to the disastrous Mexican-American War (1846-48). A Liberal constitution was promulgated in 1857, which guaranteed basic freedoms, deprived ecclesiastical orders of the right to own land, and secularized education. In response, Conservative forces launched a coup that devolved into a civil war and finally to a clergy-supported occupation by French forces under Maximilian I (1864-67). The expulsion of the French led to the reaffirmation of Liberal principles, though now marked by greater tolerance for Conservatives. The final decades of the 19th century were marked by the autocratic rule of Porfirio Díaz, who presided over a period of sustained but unequal growth. He allowed the Church and clergy to expand their temporal powers despite the restrictions imposed by the 1857 constitution.
Discontent grew among both Liberals and rural peasants under the conservative rule of Porfirio Dí... >>more
As the power and popularity of the governing Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) waned during... >>more
The current Constitution of Mexico was originally ratified in 1917, in the midst of the Mexican... >>more
In the Mexican United States all individuals shall be entitled to the privileges and immunities g... >>more
The education imparted by the Federal State shall be designed to develop harmoniously all the fac... >>more
... I. According to the religious liberties established under article 24, educational services sh... >>more
... The State cannot permit the execution of any contract, covenant, or agreement having for its ... >>more
Everyone is free to embrace the religion of his choice and to practice all ceremonies, devotions,... >>more
Every man shall be free to choose and profess any religious belief as long as it is lawful and it... >>more
... II. Religious institutions known as churches, regardless of creed, may in no case acquire, ho... >>more
The members of the Chamber of Deputies shall be: ... Uncompromised from any religious bond ... >>more
The President shall: ... Not be a member or priest of any religious cult ... >>more
The federal powers shall exercise the supervision required by law in matters relating to religiou... >>more
The rules established at this article are guided by the historical principle according to which t... >>more