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Canon Law or Canonical Theology? What Does a Theology of Law Mean for the Specificity of Canon Law?

Irish Theological Quarterly, 1994
Le droit canon fait aujourd'hui l'experience d'un elargissement de son champ disciplinaire. La promulgation d'un nouveau code, l'emergence d'une vision plus theologique de la discipline sont certainement a l'origine de ce developpement. La theologie du droit canon se refere a une maniere de proposer un fondement theologique au droit canon apres le ...
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Sin, Silence and States of Denial: Canon Law and the ‘Discovery’ of Child Sexual Abuse

Interdisciplinary Feminist Perspectives on Crimes of Clerical Child Sexual Abuse, 2015
In discussions of the sexual assault of minors, feminists, historians of sexuality and religious authorities are in uncommon agreement. They concur that, although minors have been subject to sexual assault throughout the modern era, the late 1970s and ...
Timothy W. Jones
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Canon Law on the Bench

Blackfriars, 1922
The records of the Ecclesiastical Court, some of which have recently been available for inspection, and to which special notice has been drawn of late by the very interesting paper read before the Royal Historical Society by Mr. Fincham, are full of interest for students of Catholic history.These records consist of Books of Acts (including ‘Corrections’
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A Canon of the Criminal Law

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2000
This paper cautiously assays the notion of a "canon" of writings in criminal law and procedure in the Anglo-American tradition. Identifying "canonical" writings from Blackstone to Bentham to Foucault, from classic Victorian case law to Wechslerian legal process, from modern empiricist scholars to skeptical post-modernism, it posits a core, if not ...
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Roman Law: Symbiotic Companion and Servant of Canon Law

The Cambridge History of Medieval Canon Law, 2022
Gero Dolezalek
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Education in Canon Law

Ecclesiastical Law Journal, 1998
For a number of years the Society has been troubled at the absence of, or at least the spasmodic nature of, any systematic teaching about Canon or Ecclesiastical law among ordinands and clergy of the Church of England. The first that an ordinand knows of law is often his or her Declaration of Assent and licensing as an Assistant Curate.
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Canon Law and Theology

Ecclesiastical Law Journal, 2012
The relation of religious law to theology is basic to any faith community. In this article, chiefly in terms of Roman Catholicism, but it is hoped of wider application especially within Christianity, the relation of canon law to theology is examined through papal allocutions to the judges and other members of the Church court known as the Roman Rota ...
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Crime and the canon law

2020
In addition to administering the regime of private confession, the medieval Church possessed a public system of criminal law. Discipline of the clergy and regulation of the conduct of the laity in matters such as heresy, usury, marriage and blasphemy all came within the Church’s sphere of jurisdiction.
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The Revival of Roman Law and Canon law

2015
The Digest (or Pandects), promulgated at Constantinople on December 16, 533, by the Roman emperor Justinian (527–565, born ca. 482), is perhaps the most influential text in the history of Western legal thought. Together with Justinian’s Code (promulgated on April 7, 529, with a second edition in 534), and his Institutes (533), it constituted what in ...
Thomas M. Banchich   +2 more
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