Professor David Kader, who teaches “Religion and the Constitution” at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, will give a presentation to a delegation from Kosovo on Jan. 7, as part of a three-week “citizen’s exchange” seminar with religious and non-governmental leaders from Kosovo.
The seminar is sponsored by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the U.S. Department of State and organized by ASU’s Melikian Center for Russian, Eurasian and East European Studies at ASU.
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“The citizen’s exchange project represents part of a relatively new State Department effort to use citizen exchanges to highlight ties with international ‘faith communities,’ with particular focus upon parts of the Muslim world,” according to Stephen K. Batalden, director of the Melikian Center. “The State Department also views this citizen’s exchange as contributing to the advancement of inter-ethnic understanding in Kosovo by drawing the visiting Kosovo delegation into sustained discussion with their American counterparts, comparing the Kosovo situation with how religious institutions operate within American civil society.”
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Kader will be the discussion leader for a session titled, “Religion and the Law in America.” It is described as an opening session on constitutional/legal conditions governing the free expression of religion in America (including informal introduction of issues posed by Noah Feldman in his recent monograph, Divided by God: America’s Church-State Problem – and What We Should Do About It). The Rev. Jan Olav Flaaten, executive director of the Arizona Ecumenical Council will serve as moderator for the discussion.
The delegation coming from Kosovo is roughly representative of the population as a whole, with 12 Kosovar Albanians, one Serb, and one Bosnian. By religious affiliation, the group is composed of 10 Muslims, including a Bosnian imam; two Kosovar Catholics, including a Franciscan monk from Prizren; one Serbian Orthodox journalist; and one Kosovar Protestant.
Full Article via Arizona State University
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