The contribution presents the main features and evolutions of the legal protection of religions’ food prescriptions in different legal systems, with a special reference to Italian law. The most important religious prescriptions are analyzed by classifying them in relation to food consumption, production, and distribution, and by looking at them in the light of constitutional precepts governing Italian church law. The article focuses on the legal norms that in the last few decades have dealt with several topics in the field, ranging from the right to have food preferences respected for prisoners and institutionalized people, food choices for children in schools, to the regulation of animal slaughtering. Several formal and substantive legal issues emerge that reveal the complexity of the debate and that call for protection of religious freedom to be constitutionally broadened and strengthened through the recognition of religious diversities. From a substantive point of view, a slow but growing legislative interest in food rules and their protection may be outlined. From a formal point of view, the variety of legal instruments that have been used in this field, primarily influenced by European directives, especially in the regulation of slaughtering, are not yet fully integrated in Italian church law. In Italy, the path towards religious food-related needs being recognized and implemented is deemed to be long and uneven. A law encompassing all aspects of religious freedom, and connecting substantive and formal requirements, is still lacking. Such provision would represent a major improvement, as it could provide a valid regulatory framework for all religions’ food prescriptions that are increasingly perceived as a fundamental aspect of the faithful’s human dignity.
Chizzoniti, A. G. M., La tutela della diversità: cibo, religione e diritto, in Chizzoniti, A. G. M., Tallacchini, M. (ed.), Cibo e religione: diritto e diritti, Libellula Edizioni, Tricase (LE) 2010: <<Quaderni del Dipartimento di Scienze Giuridiche>>, 20- 47 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/30867]
La tutela della diversità: cibo, religione e diritto
Chizzoniti, Antonio Giuseppe Maria
2010
Abstract
The contribution presents the main features and evolutions of the legal protection of religions’ food prescriptions in different legal systems, with a special reference to Italian law. The most important religious prescriptions are analyzed by classifying them in relation to food consumption, production, and distribution, and by looking at them in the light of constitutional precepts governing Italian church law. The article focuses on the legal norms that in the last few decades have dealt with several topics in the field, ranging from the right to have food preferences respected for prisoners and institutionalized people, food choices for children in schools, to the regulation of animal slaughtering. Several formal and substantive legal issues emerge that reveal the complexity of the debate and that call for protection of religious freedom to be constitutionally broadened and strengthened through the recognition of religious diversities. From a substantive point of view, a slow but growing legislative interest in food rules and their protection may be outlined. From a formal point of view, the variety of legal instruments that have been used in this field, primarily influenced by European directives, especially in the regulation of slaughtering, are not yet fully integrated in Italian church law. In Italy, the path towards religious food-related needs being recognized and implemented is deemed to be long and uneven. A law encompassing all aspects of religious freedom, and connecting substantive and formal requirements, is still lacking. Such provision would represent a major improvement, as it could provide a valid regulatory framework for all religions’ food prescriptions that are increasingly perceived as a fundamental aspect of the faithful’s human dignity.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.