No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2019
1 Hirschl, Ran, Comparative Matters: Renaissance of Comparative Constitutional Law (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014)Google Scholar.
2 Schonthal, Benjamin, “Constitutionalizing Religion: The Pyrrhic Success of Religious Rights in Postcolonial Sri Lanka,” Journal of Law and Religion 29, no. 3 (2014): 470–90CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
3 Mahadev, Neena, “Conversion and Anti-conversion in Contemporary Sri Lanka: Pentecostal Christian Evangelism and Theravada Buddhist Views on the Ethics of Religious Attraction,” in Proselytizing and the Limits of Religious Pluralism in Contemporary Asia, ed. Finucane, Juliana and Michael, R. Feener (Singapore: Springer, 2014), 211–35CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
4 Spencer, Jonathan, et al. , Checkpoint, Temple, Church and Mosque: A Collaborative Ethnography of War and Peace (London: Pluto, 2015)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
5 Iselin Frydenlund, “Canonical Ambiguity and Differential Practices: Buddhist Monks in Wartime Sri Lanka” (PhD diss., University of Oslo, 2011).