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Protestant Legacies in Nordic Law: Uses of the Past in the Construction of the Secularity of Law

ProNoLa

Time

1.9.2016 – 31.8.2019

Project coordinator

University of Copenhagen

Project partners

  • Åbo Akademi University
  • Uppsala University
  • University of Oslo
  • Georg-August-Universität Göttingen

Other partners

  • Council on International Relations in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Denmark
  • The Danish Ministry of Ecclesiastical Affairs
  • Evangelical Lutheran Church in Finland
  • Church Research Institute
  • National Church Council
  • Evangelical Lutheran Churh of Finland
  • Church of Norway
  • National Council
  • Royal Norwegian Ministry of Culture Department of Church Affairs
  • Church of Sweden Research Unit
  • The commission for government support for faith communities (SST) Sweden
  • Evangelische Kirche Deutschlands
  • Bundesministerium des Innern

Funded by

  • HERA – Humanities in the European Research Area

The overarching goal of the project is to provide a nuanced and critical genealogy of the negotiations of law and religion in the Northern parts of Europe from the Reformations and up to the present. The research efforts focus on the particular constellations between law and religion in the West-Nordic realm (Denmark and Norway), the East-Nordic realm (Sweden and Finland), and the German realm, in order to analyze the use of theological norms and standards as a framework for a general understanding of law as secular – not only in early modernity, but also beyond the era of the Enlightenment (in contrast to the French pattern of laïcité). Four overlapping periods are identified: (I) Confessionalization & Institutionalization (ca. 1530s-ca. 1730s) (II) Consolidation & Codification (ca. 1660-ca. 1820) (III) Constitutionalization & Hegemonization (ca. 1800s-1950s) (IV) Re-confessionalization and Internationalization (ca. 1914-today) Importantly, within and across each of these overlapping periods, the project conducts research on minority issues in order to identify tensions as well as also the darker sides of majority cultures on law.