Blasphemy and Criminal Law – Comparative Legislation and Judiciary Cover Image

Blasfemija i krivično pravo – uporedno zakonodavstvo i judikatura
Blasphemy and Criminal Law – Comparative Legislation and Judiciary

Author(s): Igor Vuković
Subject(s): Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
Published by: Правни факултет Универзитета у Београду
Keywords: Blasphemy; freedom of expression; European Court of Human Rights

Summary/Abstract: Although the dignity of the deity is in comparative legislation no longer considered as an adequate object of criminal law protection, contemporary legal systems still contain crimes that protect the religious feelings of citizens. However, like other offenses that violate honor and reputation, the unlawfulness of such behavior is often called into question if offensive exposure has had a critical note, especially if it was revealed in a literary or artistic work. The paper presents a very rich comparative case law of the national courts and the European Court of Human Rights concerning blasphemous expression, as well as relevant international documents. Despite the strong efforts to promote the absolute inviolability of freedom of expression, at the cost of offending the religious feelings of citizens, existing international documents and current case-law show some caution in defining the limits of this freedom. If the European Convention on Human Rights already allows a number of restrictions on the freedom of expression, including the interests of public security, the prevention of disorder, protection of morals or the protection of reputation, it would be completely unreasonable if legislative bodies in one society, often multiconfessional and vulnerable to incidents that shake religious feelings and the fragile stability of the community, would completely ignore the mockery of the essential content of a religious belief. On the other hand, one can not argue that the need for criminal justice protection of such values is less and less felt in modern irreligious European societies, where possible incriminations are more related to the potential consequences to the public order and peace. An extreme approach, which would ignore the existing normative framework, advocating for unlimited freedom of expression, would certainly not be a good starting point.

  • Issue Year: 2018
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 134-154
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: Serbian