AcknowledgementsContributorsTable of LegislationTable of CasesIntroductionPART 1 Pre-Kokkinakis and Post-Kokkinakis Developments1 Prt-Kokkinakis Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights: Foreshadowing the Future2 The Freedom of Religion or Belief in the European Convention on Human Rights since the Kokkinakis case; or "Quoting Kokkinakis"PART 2 Article g Jurisprudence: General Contours3 Manifestations of Religion or Belief in the Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights4 Limitations on Freedom of Religion and Belief in the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights5 Avoiding Scrutiny? The Margin of Appreciation and Religious Freedom6 Marginal Neutrality -- Neutrality and the Margin of Appreciation in the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human RightsPART 3 Religion Jurisprudence: Thematic Studies7 Kokkinakis and the Narratives of Proper and Improper Proselytizing8 Education and Freedom of Religion or Belief under the European Convention on Human Rights and Protocol No. 19 Religion and Equality: From Managing Pluralism towards a European Requirement of State Neutrality10 Freedom of Religion or Belief and Employment Law: The Evolving Approach of the European Court of Human Rights11 Freedom of Religion or Belief and Freedom of Association: Intersecting Rights in the Jurisprudence of the European Convention Mechanisms12 Conscientious Objection under the European Convention on Human Rights: The Ugly Duckling of a Flightless Jurisprudence13 Religion, Expression and Pluralism14 Religious Symbols and State Regulation: Assessing the Strategic Role of the European Court of Human RightsPART 4 Reflections15 The Legitimacy of the European Court of Human Rights in Light of Its Article 9 Jurisprudence: A Multisided Perspective16 Implementation and Impact of Strasbourg Court Rulings: The Case of Religious Minorities and their Convention Freedoms17 Grassroots Level Awareness about Religion at the European Court of Human Rights18 A Matter of Judgment: Dissenting Opinions in Cases Concerning Religion or Belief in the European Court of Human Rights19 The "Principle of Secularism" and the European Court of Human Rights: A Shell GameBibliography