About our research project: Religious Freedom in the U.S. and in Europe
This
group research project gave students from the University of South Florida St.
Petersburg (“USF” or “USFSP”) and the National School of Political Science and
Public Administration of Romania (“SPSNA”) an opportunity to work together on
research projects regarding the freedom of religion.
This
comparative legal research project was designed to introduce students to legal
research and writing, and to better understanding of the ECJ and the ECtHR in
comparison to the SCOTUS.
Students
utilized primary source material as well as secondary sources in relevant
scholarly literature during their research. A thank you to reference librarian
Jim Schnur at Poynter Library for assisting students with learning how to use
Lexis/Nexis, Westlaw, JSTOR, and the other resources available to students at
USF.
Students were given the opportunity to work
independently and as part of an international group – linking students from the
SPSNA in Bucharest with students in St. Petersburg, FL studying at USFSP. Students met “virtually,” via skype
videoconference (and also facebook group and email) and were able to share
documents in a Dropbox folder. Working together, students were able to share
information about religious freedom, the courts, and share/translate sources to
aid each other in their research endeavors.
This joint project created a “virtual classroom” linking the
students and professors from USF in St. Petersburg and SPSNA in Bucharest.
The
main focus of the research was on freedom of religion, divided into the following
six topics:
- The place of religion in the public life
- Children and religion
- Women and religion
- Freedom of religion and restricted/ institutional
settings
- Work without discrimination and religion
- Freedoms and rights within Religious
organizations
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