Abstract
Michael J. Perry’s new book, The Political Morality of Liberal Democracy, explores the issues related to human rights and the relation between religion and the law by asking the following question: what should be « the moral convictions and commitments that govern decisions about what laws to enact [and] what policies to pursue »?. Broader in scope than Perry first expected it, the book still relies on a question that has been continuously present in Perry’s writings: what should be the proper role of religion in policy and law making? He addresses those questions by looking at the grounding, the content, the implications and the judicial enforcement of what he calls the political morality of liberal democracies.
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