SECULAR STATE


Secular states shown in green.

A 'secular state' is a state or country that is officially neutral in matters of religion, neither supporting nor opposing any particular religious beliefs or practices. A secular state also treats all its citizens equally regardless of religion, and does not give preferential treatment for a citizen from a particular religion over other religions. Most often it has no state religion or equivalent. If there is a state religion, this should have only a symbolic meaning, not affecting the ordinary life of its citizens, and especially not making any distiction based on someone's religion.
A secular state is defined as protecting ''freedom of religion'' as pursued in state secularism. It is also described to be a state that prevents religion from interfering with state affairs, and prevents religion from controlling government or exercising political power. Laws protect each individual including religious minorities from discrimination on the basis of religion.
A secular state is not an atheistic state (e.g. Albania under Enver Hoxha), in which the state officially opposes all religious beliefs and practices. In some secular states, there can be a huge majority religion in the population (e.g. Turkey) and in others there may be great religious diversity (e.g. India). Secular states become secular either upon establishment of the state (e.g. United States) or upon secularization of the state (e.g. France). Movements for laïcité in France and for the separation of church and state in the United States of America began the evolution of the present secular states. Historically, the process of secularizing states typically involves granting religious freedom, disestablishing state religions, stopping public funds to be used for a religion, freeing the legal system from religious control, opening up the education system, tolerating citizens who change religion, and allowing political leadership to come to power regardless of religious beliefs. Public holidays that were originally religious holidays and other traditions are not necessarily affected, and public institutions become safe from being used and abused by religion.
Not all legally secular states are completely secular in practice. In France for example, lots of Christian holidays are official vacations for public administration, and teachers in Catholic schools are salaried by the state [1].
Many states are often considered secular where the term is not, in fact, completely applicable. Secularism has various grades of intensity. Thus, in the UK, the head of state is required to take the Coronation Oath [2] swearing to uphold the Protestant faith. The UK also maintains positions in its upper house for 26 senior clergymen of the established Church of England known as the Spiritual Peers. [3] It can therefore not be fully considered a secular state.
The reverse progression can also occur, a state can go from being secular to a theocracy as in the case of Iran where the secularizing state of the Pahlavi dynasts was replaced by the Islamic Republic (list below). Although there are elements such as those in the United States which would exert pressure to make it an officially Christian nation, Turkey an Islamic state, etc., such pressure groups are presumed to have little chance of effecting similar revolutions in any advanced country.
Since at one time all states had official religions and as the map above shows that the situation has essentially been reversed over the last 250 years, it may be concluded that the global secular trend is toward secularism in the modern period.

Contents
List of secular states
List of former secular states
Notes
See also
External links

List of secular states


The following is an incomplete list of officially secular states as of 2007:
===Africa===

Angola (Article 8 of Constitution)

Benin (Article 2 of Constitution)

Botswana

Burkina Faso ( Article 31 of Constitution)

Burundi (Article 1 of Constitution)

Cameroon (Preamble of Constitution

Cape Verde (Article 48 of Constitution)

Chad (Article 1 of Constitution)

Democratic Republic of the Congo (Article 1 of Constitution)

Republic of the Congo (Article 1 of Constitution)

Ethiopia (Article 11 of Constitution)

Gabon (Article 2 of Constitution)

The Gambia (Article 1 of Constitution)

Guinea (Article 1 of Constitution)

Guinea-Bissau (Article 1 of Constitution)

Liberia (Article 14 of Constitution)

Mali (Preamble of Constitution)

Namibia (Articles 10, 14, 19 and 21 of Constitution)

South Africa

Tunisia (98% of the population are followers of Sunni Islam.)
===Americas===

Bolivia (95% of the population are Roman Catholics.)

Brazil (Article 19 of Constitution)

Canada (Section Two of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms)

Chile

Colombia

Cuba (Article 8 of Constitution) (note, Cuba is a socialist state.)

Ecuador (95% of the population are Roman Catholics.)

Honduras (Article 77 of the Constitution), (Summary Honduras Constitutions (English)) (97% of the population are Roman Catholics.)

Mexico (Article 130 of Constitution)

Paraguay

Peru

Uruguay

Venezuela (96% of the population are Roman Catholics.)

United States of America (First Amendment)
===Asia===

Azerbaijan (Article 7 of Constitution)

People's Republic of China (Article 36 of Constitution) (note, the PRC is a socialist state.)

India (Preamble of Constitution)

Indonesia

Japan (Article 20 of Constitution)

Kazakhstan (Article 1 of Constitution)

Kyrgyzstan (Article 1 of Constitution)

Mongolia

Nepal

North Korea (note, North Korea is a socialist state.)

Philippines (Article 2, Section 6 of Constitution)

Singapore

South Korea (Article 20 of Constitution)

Syria

Taiwan

Tajikistan

Thailand (Section 38 of Constitution)

Turkmenistan (Статья 11) (Article 11 of the Constitution)

Uzbekistan

Vietnam (Article 70 of Constitution) (note, Vietnam is a socialist state.)
===Europe===

Albania (Article 7 of Constitution)

Armenia (Article 23 of Constitution) (95% of the population are followers of the Armenian Apostolic Church.)

Austria (Articles 7 and 14 of Constitution)

Belarus (Article 16 of Constitution)

Belgium (Article 20 of Constitution)

Bosnia and Herzegovina

Bulgaria

Croatia (Article 41 of Constitution)

Cyprus (Article 18 of Constitution)


Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (Article 1 of Constitution)

Czech Republic (Charter of Fundamental Rights and Basic Freedoms)

Estonia (Article 40 of Constitution)

Finland

France (Article 2 of Constitution)

Georgia (Article 9 of Constitution)

Germany (Article 140 of Constitution)

Hungary (Article 60 of Constitution)

Ireland

Italy [4]

Latvia (Article 99 of Constitution)

Lithuania

Luxembourg

Macedonia

Moldova (98% of the population are Eastern Orthodox.)

Montenegro

Netherlands

Poland (but Concordat of 1993 ratified in 1998)

Portugal (Article 41 of Constitution)

Romania

Russian Federation (Article 14 of Constitution)

Serbia

Slovakia

Slovenia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

Turkey (Article 2 of Constitution) (more then 99% of the population are followers of Islam.)

Ukraine (Article 35 of Constitution)
===Oceania===

Australia (Section 116 of Constitution)

Federated States of Micronesia (Section IV Article 2 of Constitution)

New Zealand

List of former secular states



Bangladesh - Proclaimed a secular republic upon independence in 1971, President Hossain Ershad instituted Islam as state religion by the eight amendment to the constitution (passed in June 1988), citing the need to do so to combat any rise in fundamentalist and/or extremist militant movements.

Iran - Became a secular state in 1925 after Reza Pahlavi was installed as Shah. Islam was re-insituted as state religion in December 1979 following the adoption of a new constitution.

Iraq (Chapter 1, Article 2 of the 2005 Constitution, constitution is subject to review by the Constitutional Review Committee and a possible public referendum in 2007)

Madagascar (1960-2007) Constitution with "laïc" removed

Pakistan - Was a secular state from 1947 until the proclamation of an Islamic republic in 1956.

Notes


1. Richard Teese, Private Schools in France: Evolution of a System, ''Comparative Education Review'', Vol. 30, No. 2 (May, 1986), pp. 247-259
2. Coronation Oath
3. Different types of Lords
4. US governmental report (International Religious Freedom Report 2005)

See also



Secularism

Secular education

Civil religion

External links



Secularism 101

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves