What are the policy implications of different state policies toward religion? The paper is an investigation about the relationship between the state and religion in shaping contemporary compulsory schooling in France and Israel. Why do Orthodox Jewish students in Israel learn the Torah way of life, often at the expense of other subjects and employment opportunities, whilst religious Catholic students in France cannot study the Bible in schools or Muslim students cannot learn the Prophet’s way of life? Why is religiosity actively promoted in one educational system and banned from education policy in another? Our argument is that state policies toward religion and religious schools are the result of historical processes and conditions, associated with political and legal developments. France and Israel share the central role that religion played in the early processes of state building; yet, contemporary state policies toward religion and education are most different. In France, we found that assertive secularism (laicité) finds its battling grounds in public schools, whilst in Israel prescriptive religiosity permeates every aspect of public life and schooling policies.

The Role of Religiosity in Education Policy in France and Israel / P. Mattei. - In: MONDI MIGRANTI. - ISSN 1972-4888. - 2019:3(2019), pp. 181-201.

The Role of Religiosity in Education Policy in France and Israel

P. Mattei
Primo
2019

Abstract

What are the policy implications of different state policies toward religion? The paper is an investigation about the relationship between the state and religion in shaping contemporary compulsory schooling in France and Israel. Why do Orthodox Jewish students in Israel learn the Torah way of life, often at the expense of other subjects and employment opportunities, whilst religious Catholic students in France cannot study the Bible in schools or Muslim students cannot learn the Prophet’s way of life? Why is religiosity actively promoted in one educational system and banned from education policy in another? Our argument is that state policies toward religion and religious schools are the result of historical processes and conditions, associated with political and legal developments. France and Israel share the central role that religion played in the early processes of state building; yet, contemporary state policies toward religion and education are most different. In France, we found that assertive secularism (laicité) finds its battling grounds in public schools, whilst in Israel prescriptive religiosity permeates every aspect of public life and schooling policies.
education; state-church relationship;
Settore SPS/04 - Scienza Politica
2019
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/725672
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