
This series provides comparative interdisciplinary analysis of indigenous spirituality and the legal challenges involved in its protection on national and international levels. Drawing on a variety of cases from the Americas, South Africa, and Australia, contributors discuss specificities of indigenous spirituality and theology, power dynamics behind the discussion of indigenous rights, the sacredness of natural objects for indigenous groups, the insufficiency of protections for indigenous believers within existing religious-freedom frameworks, and legal steps needed to strengthen these protections. This series is based on presentations given at the ICLRS 32nd Annual International Law and Religion Symposium, 6–7 October 2025.
Posts in the Series:
Christine Venter. “Sacred Stuff”: Indigenous Religions in Post-Apartheid South Africa
Cecilia Titizano. “You Cannot Harm Your Brother”: Indigenous Rights in a Pluriversal World
Michalyn Steele. Recent Developments in U.S. Free Exercise Jurisprudence for Native American Religion
Dana Lloyd. Religious Freedom, Indigenous Sovereignty, and Oak Flat
Jeremy Patrick. By Sufferance, Not by Right: Indigenous Spirituality and Religious Freedom in Australia
