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Compulsory curricula and human rights: a revised framework for balancing competing interests

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 October 2025

Alison Mawhinney*
Affiliation:
Bangor University , Bangor, UK
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This paper assesses the effectiveness of current legal standards in resolving rights-based disputes arising from compulsory curricula in schools, an issue of growing significance as such teaching expands in the areas of sexuality, relationship and religious education. Focusing on Article 2 of Protocol 1 (P1-2) of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), it critiques the current reliance on the ‘objective, critical, and pluralistic’ (OCP) standard, examining its alignment with the core purpose of P1-2: preventing state monopolisation in education through safeguarding qualified parental choice. The analysis identifies shortcomings in P1-2 case law, particularly the subjective nature of determining when teaching is OCP, the negation of parental objections and the neglect of children’s rights in the assessment process. To address these issues, the paper proposes a revised review framework which prioritises a justification test that recognises parental concerns, reduces reliance on public interest justifications and acknowledges the legitimacy of children’s rights as grounds for limiting parental objections. The paper argues that this refined approach better aligns with the article’s foundational purpose whilst fostering an enlarged space for the balanced consideration of competing interests and rights in educational controversies.

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Research Article
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© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society of Legal Scholars

Introduction

The choice of curriculum content in schools has the potential to generate controversy across many subject areas. History education has long been seen as a field where conflicts and tensions arise, often linked to national and social identities.Footnote 1 However, the areas of sexuality, relationship and religious education undoubtedly provide the sites of the most intense debates.Footnote 2 The content of each subject has the potential to conflict with the religious or non-religious beliefs of pupils and parents; when it does, questions of human rights arise. Tensions have commonly been relieved through the provision of a right of exemption, where the child is removed from the contested teaching or activity.Footnote 3 However, when a state decides to make a subject compulsory across all schools and removes any right to withdraw, conflicts intensify. Parents who object to the teaching cannot opt their child out of the class nor can they avoid the teaching through moving the child to another school. Not surprisingly, this heightened situation makes it more likely that legal action under human rights law is pursued.

In the UK, compulsory curriculum controversies have intensified and have increasingly become focused on whether relationship and sexuality education should be made compulsory, and on whether its content should include teaching on sexual orientation and gender identity. In England, for example, the decision in 2019 to introduce compulsory teaching about same-sex relationships and different family types in primary schools was met with vocal and public faith-based objections by parents and communities in several parts of the country.Footnote 4 In 2023 more than 50 Conservative MPs wrote to the Prime Minister claiming that children were ‘being indoctrinated with radical and unevidenced ideologies about sex and gender’, prompting the Prime Minister to bring forward a review of the relevant guidance.Footnote 5

In Wales the newly revised subject of Relationships and Sexuality Education (RSE) became compulsory in all schools in 2022. The legislation and statutory guidance requires the teaching of the subject to be developmentally appropriate for learners and an accompanying code sets out the mandatory requirements for the curriculum.Footnote 6 The Relationships and Identity strand of the code states that ‘Learners need to be supported to recognise and value different types of relationships, including families and friendships, as well as the diversity within different types of relationships, including LGBTQ+ diversity…’.Footnote 7 The decision to remove a right of exemption when the new subject was introduced faced a failed challenge in the High Court by a group of parents who contended that the absence of the right of exemption was a breach of their human rights under the ECHR.Footnote 8

In Northern Ireland and Scotland there is no compulsory relationship and sexuality education mandated for all schools; the subject may be taught in line with the school ethos and opt-outs are permitted.Footnote 9 However, in both countries subject reviews are underway to assess current provision and seek views on current exemption provisions.Footnote 10 Religious schools and parents have already expressed concerns regarding potential changes that would lead to the imposition of a mandatory RSE curriculum and the removal of a right of exemption.Footnote 11

In addition to controversies surrounding compulsory relationship and sexuality education, religious education programmes, a traditional area of dispute, continue to provoke tension. The nature of these disputes has changed in instances where a state revises a previously confessional curriculum – where an opt-put had been permitted – and introduces a compulsory non-confessional programme whilst simultaneously removing any opt-out provision. For example, in Wales the new Religion, Ethics and Values subject aims to be non-confessional in nature, and the government has removed the right of exemption, insisting that the curriculum could not breach human rights. While this approach is not contrary to human rights standards given the stated intention to deliver a non-confessional curriculum, it clearly has the potential to lead to legal action by parents who nonetheless believe that certain material conflicts with their beliefs, or who believe that the material is not being delivered by teachers in a sufficiently neutral manner.Footnote 12

In compulsory curricula controversies, human rights-based arguments are quick to emerge. The focus falls on the right of the parent to ensure that the education of their children is in conformity with their religious or philosophical convictions. The right is found in articles dealing with the right to freedom of religion or belief as well as the right to education.Footnote 13 In the ECHR, the right lies in Article 2 of the First Protocol (P1-2) where the second sentence has come to be considered a lex specialis when questions to do with freedom of religion or belief in schools fall to be examined:Footnote 14

No person shall be denied a right to an education. In the exercise of any functions which it assumes in relation to education and to teaching, the State shall respect the right of parents to ensure such education and teaching is in conformity with their own religious and philosophical convictions.

To protect parental convictions as required by this provision, the case law of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has generated the foundational norm that the state must not pursue an aim of indoctrination. To ensure against this, it has held that if information is conveyed in a manner that is not ‘objective, critical and pluralistic’ (OCP) then parents must be permitted to withdraw their children from that teaching.

On the face of it, this would appear to offer a pragmatic approach to resolving questions related to compulsory teaching: information that is not OCP should not be made compulsory unless an opt-out is provided to children of parents who consider such information to be contrary to their convictions. In other words, only OCP teaching can be made compulsory.

When a case concerning compulsory curriculum matters reaches the ECtHR, its task is to review the State’s decision to make that teaching or activity compulsory. The Court must assess whether the material is indeed OCP in nature. If it is, then the compulsory teaching is permitted. If it is not, an opt-out must be provided to remove the child from the activity or teaching to prevent indoctrination by the state. If no opt-out provision is made available, then the compulsory teaching is a violation of P1-2.

The aim of this paper is to assess the adequacy of this approach in resolving the rights-based arguments arising in the context of compulsory curricula; an essential and timely task given the inevitable increase in legal action as compulsory teaching becomes more widespread.Footnote 15 In particular, the paper is concerned to examine the appropriateness of the current reliance on the OCP standard in evaluating these complex situations. The benchmark adopted for the analysis is the degree to which the approach of the Court aligns with the fundamental and specific purpose of the article, namely, the prevention of state monopolisation in the education of children and young people.

Section 1 below draws on the extensive discussions that took place during the drafting of the article to identify and establish the founding aim of P1-2. It notes the initial opposition to the inclusion of a right to education in a treaty whose primary concern was to protect civil and political rights. The eventual decision to include the right came from a recognition that states should not have total control of the education and teaching of children and that qualified parental choice in school selection and curriculum matters should be protected. The argument made is that P1-2 must be understood as neither a conventional freedom of religion or belief article nor a broad right to education article but rather has a specific purpose which must be recognised and respected in matters that engage the article.

Section 2 examines the foundational standards that emerge from P1-2 case law and assesses their contribution to resolving curriculum controversies. It concludes that while the ECtHR has developed norms that support the original aim of the article, these norms are insufficient in offering a fair assessment of rights in matters to do with compulsory teaching. In particular, it argues that a sole focus on the OCP standard results in two concerns. These concerns are examined in Section 3. First, deciding what is OCP is not necessarily an objective exercise itself and views may differ. Parents, objecting to syllabus content on account of their convictions, may consider that authorities are not best placed to adjudicate on the kinds of material and teaching that would disrespect their convictions. If authorities determine that material is OCP and thus an opt-out is not provided, parents may reason that their rights and concerns have simply been ignored. Secondly, the use of the OCP norm focuses on parental rights, neglecting any consideration of the rights of children. To remedy this perceived deficiency, there is a temptation to interpret the OCP norm not solely as an indicator for when to provide an opt-out but as a prescriptive norm in developing school curricula. This approach, however, risks taking P1-2 well beyond its remit and ascribing human rights law a highly interventionist role in a manner neither foreseen nor sanctioned by the article or by the ECHR more broadly.

The final section proposes a revised approach to reviewing a state’s decision to introduce compulsory curriculum matters, one that mitigates the concerns identified and which aligns more closely with the purpose of P1-2. This revised review reduces the focus on an OCP assessment through more readily accepting an interference with parental rights and by recognising children’s rights and interests as the legitimate ground of limitation, in place of the current tendency by states to rely on public interest arguments. The article argues that this revised approach to the review of states’ decisions to introduce compulsory teaching sits comfortably with the Court’s own developing jurisprudence when dealing with matters involving children as well as its approach to assessing compulsory teaching issues when these matters have occasionally arisen under other articles of the ECHR.

The overall argument offered is that while the revised approach to the review will still undoubtedly lead to intense debates, it provides an approach that better aligns with the founding purpose of the article and neither denies the concerns of parents nor neglects the rights of children and young people.

1. Evolution of the right

Drafting disagreements on the right to education proved so complex and heated that it was decided not to include the right in the main body of the ECHR when the treaty was opened for signature in 1950.Footnote 16 Instead the right was placed in a protocol to the Convention, signed 15 months later in March 1952. Initial disagreement had focused on whether provisions relating to education should feature at all in a treaty designed to guarantee political democracy in Europe.Footnote 17 The right was seen as one of several ‘family’ rights and there were objections to the inclusion of any ‘family’ right in the Convention, such as the proposed rights to marry and to freedom from arbitrary interference in family life.

Besides this fundamental objection, some delegates were opposed to the right’s inclusion on practical grounds, arguing that the right would be hard to define and therefore not justiciable.Footnote 18 It was also argued that a right concerning freedom of religion and belief already existed in the draft treaty and it could be engaged if matters to do with freedom of thought, conscience and religion arose in an educational setting.Footnote 19 Ultimately, however, these arguments did not prevail. While the ECHR was not bound to model itself on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), many found persuasive the argument put forward for the inclusion in that instrument of a parental right to choose the kind of education to be given to their children. As Mr De La Vallee-Poussin (Belgium) noted:

The United Nations attached considerable importance to it because it observed, through the experience of these last twenty-five years in Europe, that one of the most dangerous methods which was used by totalitarian movements, parties or Governments to subjugate a people, was the method of education.Footnote 20

The majority of the Committee came to agree and argued for the inclusion of the article (and the other family rights) on this basis.

The Committee recalled the time in the recent past when in some countries, certain people were denied the right to marry on account of race or religious convictions. It also recalled the legislation, under which some countries suffered during cruel years, which subordinated the child to the benefit of the State.Footnote 21

Delegates from countries with totalitarian pasts were particularly vocal in advocating for a right for parental choice in education, noting its potential to prevent democracies from turning into dictatorships. For Mr Serrarens (Netherlands) it was necessary to support ‘family rights, which were so cruelly violated by the Nazis. They must be maintained because without them our Convention will not attain its aims.’Footnote 22 Mr Cingolani (Italy) likewise reminded ‘the Assembly of the gravest wrongs committed by Fascism in Italy … tearing of children from their families to make them supporters of the dictatorship’.Footnote 23 In a emotive contribution, Mrs Weber, a delegate from the German Federal Republic, was adamant that the right was absolutely necessary to protect against totalitarianism:

The implementation of this right is for us a very urgent matter. Under the Third Reich we in Germany suffered cruelly from enslavement of conscience to which parents and children were subjected in every school in the matter of education and teaching. All young people, infants and older children, were under the domination of the totalitarian State. The same dreadful position holds today in the Eastern zone of Germany under Russian domination. It is torture for families which have to send their children to school every day.Footnote 24

The desire to include an article that would provide protection against any future attempt by a totalitarian regime to monopolise the education of children reflected broader and pre-existing concerns around the relationship between education, state authority and religious freedom. For some delegates the importance of securing a parental right was clearly influenced by philosophical and theological thinking supportive of the idea of parental authority in schooling.Footnote 25 Such influences stem both from the Catholic Church’s principle of subsidiarity rooted in natural law and the concepts of sphere sovereignty and structural pluralism developed within Reformational philosophy.Footnote 26 Both these theoretical perspectives strongly affirm the notion that education should not be subordinated to state control and, as such, support and align with an aim of securing parental educational rights in the ECHR.

Deliberations on the draft article were protracted and two years after discussions on the provision had first started Mr Pierre-Henri Teitgen, Rapporteur of the Committee in discussions before the Consultative Assembly, attempted to sum up the aim of the article in an effort to remind the Committee and the Council of Ministers of the fundamental and specific purpose of including this education article in a civil and political rights treaty:

The requisitioning, the monopolisation of young people by the State, the obligation, enforced upon all children, independently of the will of their parents, of joining the State youth organisations where they received an abominable totalitarian training – these things are familiar to all of us. We are all familiar with the suppression of free or private educational institutions, the obligation imposed upon all parents to place their children in the educational institutions of the State, where they received the training prescribed by the State; we have seen children brought up from the age of five to worship force, violence, racialism, and hatred. This what we wish to avoid.Footnote 27

The aim of the article was thus clearly to avoid a similar monopolisation in the future through guaranteeing parental choice in education; in other words, ensuring that parents would not be compelled to send their children to a state-designated institution but would have the freedom to send them, for example, to a private educational institution.

The right to education that was eventually agreed upon is clearly much narrower in scope than a typical right to education provision such as that found in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Here, the Covenant’s education provisions, in addition to protecting parental choice and convictions, are also concerned with wider matters such as setting out the aims of education and the varying entitlement with respect to different levels of education. Likewise, P1-2 is far from a general right to freedom of religion or belief, which typically guarantees a right to change one’s religion or belief as well as a qualified right to manifest religion or belief in public or in private.Footnote 28 P1-2 is an article conceived and formulated to meet a specific aim and to deliver a specific guarantee: to prevent state monopolisation of education and teaching, through guaranteeing freedom of choice in matters of education and teaching. The next section examines how far the ECtHR has retained this focus when adjudicating matters under P1-2 and the extent to which its approach is effective in treating compulsory teaching cases.

2. Foundational standards

In the very first P1-2 case to come before it – the 1968 Belgian Linguistics Case – the ECtHR directed itself to consider the drafting discussions and the aim of the provision when considering the scope of the negative right found in the first sentence of P1-2: ‘No person shall be denied the right to education’.Footnote 29 It concluded that the right in the first sentence places an obligation on the state to guarantee a right of access to educational institutions existing at a given time within its territory.Footnote 30 This interpretation and the subsequent norm of choice in schooling reflects the drafters’ central aim of preventing state monopolisation in the education of children through ensuring parents would not be compelled to send their children to an educational institution chosen by the state. The Court recognised that the right of educational choice may require regulation by the state and the nature of this regulation may vary ‘according to the needs and resources of the Community and of individuals’.Footnote 31 However, it explicitly noted that any such regulation must never injure the substance of the right to education nor conflict with other Convention rights.

Given that mandatory attendance at a particular type of school has not arisen as an issue in Council of Europe states, cases concerning compulsion in education have instead come to focus on mandatory curriculum matters within schools. Naturally, this has led to significant consideration of the parental right of respect for religious or philosophical convictions found in the second sentence of P1-2. The formative judgment came in the 1976 case of Kjeldsen, Busk Madsen and Pedersen v Denmark. Footnote 32 In response to an increased rate of unwanted pregnancy and abortion, Denmark passed legislation that mandated state schools to integrate sex education into the compulsory components of the curriculum. Several Christian parents objected to the nature of this integrated teaching and requested that their children be exempted.Footnote 33 Their request was denied, and they complained that their right to have their children’s education be ‘in conformity with their own religious and philosophical convictions’ under P1-2 had been violated.

The ECtHR found no violation, reasoning that the information and knowledge being conveyed in the teaching was OCP in manner and hence an exemption was not required to protect the parental right found in the second sentence of P1-2.Footnote 34 To this standard of OCP, the Court added an overarching norm of a prohibition on indoctrination:

The State is forbidden to pursue an aim of indoctrination that might be considered as not respecting parents’ religious and philosophical convictions. That is the limit that must not be exceeded.Footnote 35

In reaching its decision that the compulsory sex education was OCP and thus not aimed at indoctrination, the Court examined the purpose and nature of the relevant legislation. It noted that the Danish state’s aim was to provide children with information:

that warned them against phenomena it views as disturbing, for example, the excessive frequency of births out of wedlock, induced abortions and venereal diseases. The public authorities wish to enable pupils, when the time comes, ‘to take care of themselves and show consideration for others in that respect’.Footnote 36

The Court concluded that responding to these considerations through the introduction of compulsory sex teaching did ‘not entail overstepping the bounds of what a democratic State may regard as the public interest’.Footnote 37 In particular, it noted that the state was ‘in no way’ attempting to indoctrinate pupils through ‘advocating a specific kind of behaviour’.Footnote 38

The ECtHR did not elaborate further on its understanding of OCP in reaching the decision that the teaching did not violate P1-2. However, its approach to matters of compulsory teaching and respecting parental convictions is clearly set out: if information or knowledge is conveyed in an OCP manner, then schools can make this material compulsory and no opt-out is permitted.Footnote 39 Conversely, if information or knowledge is not conveyed in an OCP manner, then schools cannot make this material compulsory unless parents are able to withdraw their children from such teaching. The resulting state obligation is thus to ensure opt-out provision in situations where the teaching is considered not to be OCP in order to protect parental convictions.Footnote 40 The Court noted that this is precisely what happened in Danish schools where opt-outs were offered with respect to doctrinal religious education, given that this teaching ‘of necessity disseminates tenets and not mere knowledge’.Footnote 41

In discussing the relationship between the two rights found in P1-2, the Court describes the parental right as ‘an adjunct’ to the ‘fundamental right’ found in sentence one, that is, the right of access to educational institutions existing at a given time.Footnote 42 The approach adheres to the drafters’ rationale for including the article in the Convention: to protect against the state monopolisation in the teaching and education of children. The basic right (sentence one) allows for choice in selecting a school, while the parental right (sentence two) further ensures that children are protected from teaching that does not respect parental convictions, no matter which school a child is attending, and even if the school is one that has been chosen by their parents. This latter right thus provides an additional protection against unwanted influences, especially important in situations where only state schools exist, where the state mandates a particular curriculum across all schools in its jurisdiction or where the majority of schools in a state are religious schools, leaving no realistic practical alternative available to parents.

The foundational norms set down in the Kjeldsen case have been reiterated many times by the Court when considering P1-2 cases.Footnote 43 This body of jurisprudence clearly establishes that the article is limited in its focus. There is no right for parents to have their children educated according to their religious and philosophical convictions nor any obligation on the state to establish or subsidise any specific type or level of education. The Court’s approach certainly does not indicate that the article has any role in prescribing the nature of a curriculum. Nothing in the drafting discussions would support such a position.

Indeed, the Court has repeatedly noted that the setting and planning of the curriculum falls in principle within the competence of states.Footnote 44 The only Convention-related restraint on choice of curriculum content derives from Article 17 of the ECHR.Footnote 45 This article, frequently referred to during the drafting discussions, acts as a protection against concerns that states would use schools to transmit non-democratic ideologies. There is, therefore, no obligation placed on the state to teach a particular type of curriculum – for example, a curriculum that is OCP – nor is there any obstacle to the state mandating, for example, confessional religious teaching in its schools. Indeed, at the time of the drafting and ratification of P1-2, confessional religious education in state schools was the reality in the vast majority of states parties and remains so today in several countries. Fundamentally, the aim of the article is to guarantee choice in education; it is not concerned with telling states what to teach. The parental right is protected not by prescribing what should be taught but by ensuring there an opt-out is provided if what is being taught is not OCP. The Court, therefore, is only interested in the content of a curriculum in so far as its needs to establish whether that content is OCP and thus whether an opt-out should be provided by the state.

The case of Folgerø v Norway clearly illustrates this approach.Footnote 46 Here, the Court was asked to examine the adequacy of a scheme of partial exemptions from a compulsory subject in Christianity, religion and philosophy taught in Norwegian schools. The examination required the Court to look in depth at the legislative framework and its intentions to establish whether the information and knowledge to be conveyed would meet the OCP standard.

Given the complexity of the nature of the partial opt-out scheme, the Court was obliged to examine the curriculum in detail to reach a conclusion on this point.Footnote 47 In the course of its examination, the Court noted that there were both quantitative and qualitative differences in the teaching of Christianity compared to other religions and philosophies.Footnote 48 It questioned how this unevenness would assist schools in attaining the legislation’s stated educational aim of promoting ‘understanding, respect and the ability to maintain a dialogue between people with different perceptions of beliefs and convictions’.Footnote 49 However, the Court’s principal concern was whether this imbalance

could be said to have been brought to a level acceptable under Article 2 of Protocol No 1 by the possibility for pupils to request partial exemption from the KRL subject under section 2-4(4) of the Education Act 1998.Footnote 50

In other words, the Court was of the view that the imbalance it had identified in terms of content and mode of delivery was capable of leading to teaching that may not be considered OCP.Footnote 51 However, if, thanks to the partial exemption scheme, pupils could be opted out of any such teaching then this imbalance would be unproblematic. The Court proceeded to examine the effectiveness of this scheme. It concluded that the scheme was ineffective in protecting the parental right and thus found a violation of P1-2:

the system of partial exemption was capable of subjecting the parents concerned to a heavy burden with a risk of undue exposure of their private life and that the potential for conflict was likely to deter them from making such requests. In certain instances, notably with regard to activities of a religious character, the scope of a partial exemption might even be substantially reduced by differentiated teaching. This could hardly be considered consonant with the parents’ right to respect for their convictions for the purposes of Article 2 of Protocol No. 1.Footnote 52

While the Folgerø judgment followed the established P1-2 norms, it would certainly have been helpful if the Court had more fully and explicitly explained its approach and rationale for examining the underpinning legislation in such depth, namely, to ascertain whether an opt-out provision was required and whether the partial opt-out scheme was effective. Indeed, all P1-2 judgments dealing with the right to respect for parental convictions are vulnerable to the criticism that the Court fails to give an explicit explanation of the relevant norms, specifically that states can teach material that is not OCP but if they do so then opt-out provisions must exist.Footnote 53

3. A preoccupation with the OCP norm: resulting tensions

The Court’s norm-setting in P1-2 cases supports the article’s foundational aim of preventing state monopolisation in teaching through providing a right of school choice and offering a mechanism to protect convictions within schools. However, its heavy reliance on establishing whether what is taught is OCP – and therefore not incompatible with parental convictions – has created two areas of tension and dissatisfaction that have come to be amplified in recent cases concerning compulsory curricula.

First, for some, there is a frustration that the focus on the question of the OCP nature of the curriculum – to determine whether parental rights should be protected through an opt-out – ignores the rights and interests of children. To remedy this perceived deficiency, there can be a tendency, conscious or not, to interpret the norm of OCP in a wider manner, as an obligation on states to ensure a curriculum that is OCP. The attractiveness of an obligatory OCP curriculum is reinforced by suggestions that opt-outs are, in practice, an ineffective means by which to protect parental convictions and, further, can lead to the exclusion and stigmatisation of children in the school environment.Footnote 54

In the UK the desire for a wider interpretation and application of the OCP norm has received support from several domestic court judgments which have erroneously interpreted the P1-2 obligation in this way.Footnote 55 In R (Fox) v Secretary of State for Education, the judge, Warby J, drew on ECtHR jurisprudence to examine whether, inter alia, the omission of non-religious worldviews from a religious studies curriculum would breach P1-2 standards.Footnote 56 He concluded that it would: ‘the complete exclusion of any study of non-religious beliefs for the whole of Key Stage 4 …. would not in my judgment be compatible with [P1-2].’Footnote 57

In reaching this decision, the judge correctly noted that ‘in carrying out its educational functions the state owes parents a positive duty to respect their religious and philosophical convictions’.Footnote 58 However, he erred in concluding that this respect should be manifested through according ‘equal respect to different religious convictions and to non-religious beliefs’ on a ‘qualitative basis’ within the curriculum.Footnote 59 This conclusion misrepresents the Folgerø judgment. Here the Strasbourg Court was interested in examining the Norwegian curriculum from a quantitative and qualitative perspective in order to decide whether the resulting teaching would necessitate opt-out provision, and critically, whether the Norwegian scheme of partial exemption was capable of operating in a manner that ensured such provision.Footnote 60 The Court was thus adhering to its long-standing position of preventing state monopolisation in teaching through ensuring parental choice, in this case through providing an option to withdraw a child from any teaching considered not to be OCP.

The Fox judgment has had an inevitable and unhelpful impact on the understanding and application of P1-2 and the role of international human rights law in protecting freedom of religion or belief in schools.Footnote 61 The approach was closely followed in a 2022 judgment of the Northern Ireland High Court in a case concerning the teaching of religious education and collective worship in primary schools.Footnote 62 Here the judge noted that the judgment of Warby J in Fox ‘provides a useful analysis of this issue’Footnote 63 and adopted the argument that a failure to deliver the teaching and worship in an OCP manner – which could not be saved by the exemption provision whose existence was ‘a manifestation of the lack of pluralism in question’ – caused a breach of P1-2.Footnote 64

The notion that P1-2 demands states to teach an OCP curriculum has also permeated aspects of government policy. When consulting on its revised religious education curriculum in 2019, the Welsh Government believed it was obliged to develop and deliver an OCP curriculum, presumably following the reasoning set out in the Fox case a number of years earlier: ‘The courts have established that RE must be taught in an objective, critical and pluralistic manner; in particular, the state is not permitted to pursue an aim of indoctrination (“the Pluralistic Requirement”).’Footnote 65 In the event, Wales did introduce a new mandatory curriculum entitled Religion, Values and Ethics (RVE) according to these criteria. However, and significantly, it is important to recognise that it was not required to do so because of its obligations arising from P1-2; a decision of that nature is a question of policy choice rather than a requirement of human rights law.

In implementing the new RVE curriculum the Welsh Government chose to remove the statutory right to withdraw children. At the same time, it similarly chose to remove the right of exemption for the new Relationships and Sexuality Education (RSE) subject, a decision that was challenged in R (Isherwood & Others) v Welsh Ministers. Footnote 66 In her decision, Mrs Justice Steyn was convinced of the government’s intentions to deliver the new RSE subject in an OCP manner and hence dismissed the appeal. For present purposes what is noteworthy in the judgment is the continued misinterpretation of the nature of the obligation arising from the second sentence of P1-2. The judge notes and follows Warby J in Fox in erroneously holding that there is a requirement on states to deliver a pluralistic curriculum, rather than recognising that the norm of OCP is the standard by which to assess whether opt-out provision should exist.Footnote 67

This direction of jurisprudential travel appears to have been checked by a return to an accurate reading of P1-2 and the proper role of the OCP norm in the recent 2024 decision of the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal, an appeal from the judgment in the JR87 case.Footnote 68 The Court upheld the trial judge’s finding that the curriculum was not conveyed in an OCP manner.Footnote 69 However, it correctly held that no breach of P1-2 could be established because of the existence of the unqualified statutory right of the parents to have their child excused from attendance at religious education or collective worship.

The Court found that the trial judge’s finding that the state ‘must accord equal respect to different religious convictions and to non-religious beliefs. That is the limit which must not be exceeded’ was wrong in principle.Footnote 70 Rather, the limit that must not be exceeded was indoctrination. In other words, if the norm of the OPC standard was not met and there was no remedy offered (namely, a right of exemption), then ‘a finding of indoctrination and breach of [P1-2] will follow’.Footnote 71

In essence, the Court of Appeal’s judgment returns the interpretation of P1-2 to its appropriate focus and one which supports the drafters’ original aim of preventing state monopolisation in the education of children.Footnote 72 At the same time, however, the judgment is a reminder of how the current interpretative approach to protecting against state monopolisation leads to a limited approach in matters relating to compulsory curriculum content – the decision hinges on whether the content is considered OCP and whether there is a need for an opt-out to protect parental rights. There is no space in these judicial debates around compulsory curricula to consider explicitly children’s rights and interests, nor the type of information and teaching that should be conveyed to children.

While this first area of tension in the current interpretation of P1-2 originates in concerns that parents’ rights are overly emphasised to the detriment of children’s rights and interests, tension in the second area comes from a sense that parental convictions are at times too easily set aside by courts who claim to know better than parents when material is incompatible with a parental conviction.

In deciding P1-2 cases, the ECtHR’s task is to determine whether there has been an interference with the parental right to respect for their convictions in their children’s education. If there has been, then clearly an opt-out must be provided. The Court’s assumption is that if the teaching is found to be OPC then it cannot conflict with any convictions. The task ultimately means that the Court must decide whether the parents are correct in arguing that the material or activity under scrutiny is incompatible with their convictions. In other words, the Court has the decisive say as to what constitutes a conflict with the parents’ convictions, not the parents; it decides whether there has been an interference.

Case law shows that the Court has been ready to dismiss outright parental claims of an interference and to substitute its own view instead. In a case concerning the compulsory display of a crucifix in state classrooms, the Grand Chamber ignored the parent’s claim of possible indoctrination, stating instead ‘there is no evidence before the Court that the display of a religious symbol on classroom walls may have an influence on pupils’.Footnote 73 In Valasmis v Greece, where parents objected to the forced participation of their daughter in a military parade, the Court concluded, that contrary to the parents’ claim, it could ‘discern nothing, either in the purpose of the parade or in the arrangements for it, which could offend the applicants’ pacifist convictions’.Footnote 74

More recently, in the case of Petrovy v Russia, the Court held that there was both a subjective element and objective element to assessing whether an interference existed, and held that the applicants’ subjective perception was not in itself sufficient to establish a breach of P1-2.Footnote 75 It was rather the Court’s objective viewpoint that was decisive and, in this case, it decided that there was ‘no evidence, beyond the applicants’ claims, that the third applicant’s experience of the ceremony was marked by any indoctrination or coercion’:Footnote 76

From an objective viewpoint, the Court notes that the rite of blessing was an isolated incident in the third applicant’s upbringing, limited in scope and duration… there is no evidence, beyond the applicants’ claims, that the third applicant’s experience of the ceremony was marked by any indoctrination or coercion.

Clearly, some cases present facts that can be lend themselves to a relatively straightforward assessment as to whether there has been an interference based on the OCP criteria, for example, where children of one faith are exposed to the confessional teaching of another religion in religious education classes. In such situations, the Court can with relative ease conclude that the teaching is not OCP and thus interferes with the parental right unless an opt-out is provided.Footnote 77 However, where matters may be less factual, for example, a school visit to a place of worship that is not related to the child’s religion or belief, then the question arises as to the appropriateness of a Court, rather than the parent concerned, making the determination as to whether the matter conflicts with parental convictions.Footnote 78

The willingness of the Court to decide when a conflict exists sits rather uneasily with its stated position that it is not the Court’s task to determine what principles and beliefs are to be considered central to any given religion nor to enter into any other sort of interpretation of religious questions.Footnote 79 It further sits in marked contrast to the approach it adopts when examining a claimed interference with the qualified right to manifest one’s religion or belief found in Article 9 (the general right to freedom of religion or belief article of the ECHR). While the Court will begin its determination in these Article 9 manifestation cases by examining the question of whether there has been an interference with an act of manifestation, it does so primarily to establish that the claim engages Article 9 and, having satisfied itself that it does, it is thus enabled to proceed to a justification test which leads to a final decision as to whether a violation has occurred.Footnote 80 As Sandberg notes:

In most cases the question of whether there is an interference … is a formality. This is to be welcomed. It is usually unnecessary to dismiss claims on the basis that the claimant’s right to freedom of religion has not been interfered with. It is preferable for the Court to accept that there has been an interference and then to consider the factual merits of the claim properly and fully using the question of justification under Article 9(2).Footnote 81

The justification test that ensues is carried out according to the criteria set out in Article 9(2), namely the action must be prescribed by law, have as its aim one of the listed legitimate aims – public safety, protection of public order, health or morals, protection of the rights and freedoms of others – and be necessary in a democratic society.

It is argued here that a similar approach that places the emphasis on a justification test, rather than on the need to establish whether an interference existed based on the OCP standard, would have several considerable benefits in P1-2 cases. It would reduce the focus on determining the OCP nature of the mandatory teaching or activity and thus remove the Court from the role of adjudicator in matters that may be non-factual; it would better recognise the subjective nature of aspects of religious and philosophical convictions that may not be apparent to a secular court; and it would facilitate a greater opportunity for a debate on the place of the parental right within a wider rights context.

4. A revised approach

As noted above, P1-2 is considered a lex specialis when questions to do with compulsory activities and freedom of religion or belief in schools come to be examined. However, the ECtHR has been forced to consider these issues under Article 8 (right to a private and family life) and Article 9 (right to freedom of religion or belief) of the ECHR in situations where the state party has not ratified P1-2. In determining these cases, the Court has naturally adopted the justification-centred approach associated with these articles in place of the usual OCP assessment found in P1-2. The resulting decisions illustrate the benefits of doing so in terms of both avoiding the need to decide whether there has been a conflict with parental beliefs and in prompting the state to provide an explanation for its decision to make a school activity compulsory.

In the 2017 case of Osmanoglu and Kocabas v Switzerland, the applicants challenged the refusal by the authorities to exempt their daughters from compulsory mixed swimming lessons on account of their religious beliefs.Footnote 82 Switzerland has not ratified P1-2 and so the applicants relied on Article 9. In contrast to a case brought under P1-2, the Court did not have to wrestle with the OCP norm to determine whether there had been an interference with parental convictions. The Court readily accepted that there had been an interference with the right to manifest a religion or belief, in essence establishing that the right to freedom of religion was engaged. It then focussed its attention on a justification test to examine whether the interference was necessary in a democratic society; in other words, whether the measures taken at the national level were justified in principle and proportionate.Footnote 83

In making its determination, the Court accepted that the Swiss Government’s reasons for imposing mandatory swimming lessons were linked to legitimate grounds for interference under Article 9(2), namely for the protection of public order and the protection of the rights and freedoms of others. In reaching a conclusion of no violation of Article 9, the Court was strongly persuaded by the Government’s argument that compulsory swimming lessons both benefited society through facilitating social cohesion and the integration of religious minorities in Swiss society, and benefited pupils by protecting them against social exclusion within the school and guaranteeing them equal opportunities in the education and training.Footnote 84 It concluded that the ‘children’s interest in an all-round education, facilitating their successful social integration according to local customs and mores, takes precedence over the parents’ wish to have their daughters exempted from mixed swimming lessons’.Footnote 85

The process of adjudication provided by the structure of Article 9 contrasts favourably with the approach taken under P1-2. The willingness to accept that the domestic measure interfered with the parental right to freedom of religion led to a justification test where the national authorities were required to defend the interference based on permitted grounds of limitation. The Court’s task was to review these arguments, weighing them against the rights of the parents, rather than examining whether the activity was OCP, as would have been demanded under P1-2.

While the above approach provides for a more comprehensive consideration of the issues involved in matters of compulsory teaching, the Court’s assessment in this case raises two concerns. First, acceptance that the public interest of socialisation and integration could be linked to the ground of public order in the quest to find a legitimate aim is questionable. Moreover, collective state aims of this nature do not align with the specific underlying aim of P1-2, namely the prevention of state monopolisation. The right was born out of a desire to ensure states could never replicate the control totalitarian states had exerted over children’s education. To allow a state to assert ill-defined public interest aims such as social integration to justify compulsory activities risks allowing a state to control children and young people’s education to an extent that could negate parental rights in every instance.

Secondly, while the Court did accept that the rights of others – in this instance the rights of children – was a legitimate ground for interference, its subsequent analysis of any such rights was weak and poorly developed. Rather than identifying specific rights and standards, it adopts a more paternalistic approach in referring to children’s interests and what it considers to be important for them, for example, ‘a child’s interest in attending those lessons lies not merely in learning to swim and taking physical exercise, but above all in participating in that activity with all the other pupils’.Footnote 86

A second case against Switzerland later that same year provided a more robust justification procedure that went some way in remedying both these weaknesses. The complaint in AR and LR v Switzerland concerned a refusal to accept a request for exemption from compulsory sex education for a primary school child.Footnote 87 Again, owing to the fact that Switzerland has not ratified P1-2, the Court examined the issues under another article, this time Article 8, where the Court noted that the education of a child, in so far as it constituted one of the fundamental aspects of a parent’s identity, could be part of the parent’s private life.Footnote 88 The Court found that the rejection of the exemption request constituted an interference with the parent’s exercise of her rights protected by Article 8 and thus proceeded to examine whether the interference was necessary in a democratic society.

The Court considered that the protection of health, a permitted ground for interference under Article 8(2), provided a valid reason for the interference considering the aims of the intended sex education which included the prevention of sexual violence and exploitation which posed a threat to the mental and physical health of children. It further referred to children’s rights when considering whether the interference could be said to meet a pressing social need. Here it made several references to specific rights in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Children (UNCRC). First, it noted that while Article 5 of the UNCRC recognised the role of parents in providing guidance and direction to their children, this was not an end in itself but must always serve the well-being of the child.Footnote 89 It then noted that Article 29(d) provides that education must aim at ‘preparing the child to assume the responsibilities of life in a free society’ and, further, that Article 19 requires states to take ‘all measures’ including ‘educational’ measures to ‘protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse … including sexual abuse’. The Court concluded that the school sex education in question pursed these aims in a proportionate manner and declared the case inadmissible.

The Court’s attention to a ground of interference unrelated to public interest, along with its detailed consideration of specific children’s rights in evaluating the domestic authorities’ reasoning, illustrates a preferable approach to examining compulsory curriculum issues. If an approach of this nature were to be explicitly adopted when examining cases falling under P1-2 – instead of remaining focused on the OCP norm – the benefits would be three-fold. First, by more readily recognising an interference with parental convictions, the Court removes itself from the need for an assessment of the compatibility of the teaching with those convictions in all but the most egregious of cases. Secondly, in refusing to accept a public interest aim as a sole legitimate ground and instead identifying an aim related to children’s interests (for example health, as in the AR case above), it removes the risk of the state using its interests to negate individual rights too readily and in so doing more closely aligns the outcome with the original aim of the article: the prevention of state monopolisation. Finally, in injecting children’s rights at two points in the review – as a legitimate ground for interference as well as in the proportionality assessment – the Court allows for a wider consideration of rights and interests than those examined under the current OCP standard.

Adopting an explicit justification approach for P1-2 cases along the lines of the Swiss cases above is not a substantial shift for the Court. The parental right found in the second sentence P1-2 has always been conceived as a limited one. The drafters of the right were extremely clear on this: ‘it is obvious that the right, of which we are speaking here, is a right which, in every country of the world, should be regulated to a certain extent by the State’.Footnote 90 At the same time they were clear as to the necessity of reviewing any such state-imposed restrictions to avoid the constant fear of ‘educational totalitarianism’.Footnote 91 The space for this domestic regulation as well as for the Strasbourg Court’s role in reviewing of any such regulation has emerged from the Court’s recognition that states enjoy a margin of appreciation, subject to the supervisory jurisdiction of the ECtHR, in their efforts

to reconcile exercise of the functions they assume in relation to education and teaching with respect for the right of parents to ensure such education and teaching in conformity with their own religious and philosophical convictions. That applies to organisation of the school environment and to the setting and planning of the curriculum …Footnote 92

However, in contrast to qualified rights such as the right to manifest a religion or belief, the process for reviewing a limitation and the associated permitted grounds of limitation are not set out in the article itself. Moreover, the Court has demonstrated a willingness to give states a wide margin of appreciation when reviewing measures that restrict the rightFootnote 93 and, further, has regularly accepted justifications based on a perceived benefit to society. For example, in Konrad v Germany, the Court accepted the arguments of the domestic authorities that stressed ‘the general interest of society in avoiding the emergence of parallel societies based on separate philosophical convictions and the importance of integrating minorities into society’.Footnote 94 Similarly, in the Valamis case concerning compulsory participation in a military parade, the Court notes that such ‘commemorations of national events serve … the public interest’.Footnote 95 The willingness to accept an interference on the nebulous basis of ‘public interest’ or ‘general interest of society’ is concerning. Fundamentally, it does not align with drafters’ purpose for including the right in the Convention. The Committee saw it as a family right whose purpose was to protect against undue state intrusion in the education of children. To allow an argument based on societal interests to negate the right runs directly contrary to this original aim. On this basis, for example, a totalitarian-minded regime could all too easily argue that its education curricula and policies were justified in the interest of society and thereby compel attendance at certain teaching and activities.

The need for an alternative legitimate ground of interference to guide a margin of appreciation examination is thus required. The two Swiss cases demonstrate the appropriateness of using the rights of children as such a ground. This view finds support in the drafters’ original discussions, where some delegates argued that the rights and interests of children should lie at the heart of protection offered by P1-2. Mr Pernot (France) expressed the view that the provision of a parental right in the article should be seen as ‘less of a question of a right than the freedom of action to fulfil the obligations and the duty’ which a parent assumes.Footnote 96 The idea that parents had responsibilities and not rights with regard to a child was echoed by Mr De La Vallee-Poussin (Belgium), who encouraged his fellow committee members to ‘speak of the duty and not the right of parents’,Footnote 97 while Mr Philip (France) spoke of the ‘sacred right of a child to be brought up in accordance with methods of free enquiry’.Footnote 98

Recent Strasbourg jurisprudence increasingly demonstrates that the Court is willing to refer to the rights and best interests of the child in considering cases concerning children and to ground its arguments in relevant international human rights law.Footnote 99 In the recent 2023 case of Macate v Lithuania, the Court stressed that ‘where children are involved, their best interests must be taken into account’.Footnote 100 In determining whether the aim of the interference put forward by the state in this case was legitimate, it clearly recognised that

There is a broad consensus – including in international law – in support of the idea that in all decisions concerning children, directly or indirectly, their best interests are a primary consideration.Footnote 101

The case concerned the temporary suspension of a children’s fairytale book depicting same-sex relationships and its subsequent labelling as harmful to children under the age of 14, an action argued to be in violation of Article 10, the right to freedom of expression. In identifying the legal framework appropriate to the case, the Court not only referred to the principles of Article 10 but additionally specifically referenced the right of the child to receive information under the ICCPR as well as the UNCRC, where Article 17 holds that state parties:

shall ensure that the child has access to information and material from a diversity of national and international sources, especially those aimed at the promotion of his or her social, spiritual and moral well-being and physical and mental health.

Conclusion

The introduction of compulsory curricula in the areas of sexuality, relationship and religious education removes the traditional safeguard for protecting parental convictions: the right to withdraw. As compulsory teaching becomes more widespread, it is inevitable that more cases will come before the domestic courts and the ECtHR under P1-2 of the ECHR. However, the current interpretative approach to P1-2 is problematic in the context of compulsory curricula. The reliance and singular focus on the OCP norm not only risks ignoring parents’ rights entirely but has also caused the right to be overstretched at times in an unacceptably prescriptive manner. Both developments threaten to undermine the original and specific purpose of the article.

An examination of the drafting discussions clearly shows that the aim of the article is to protect against state monopolisation in the education of children and young people. This is manifested through allowing parental choice in school selection as well as a qualified say when it comes to curriculum matters. To protect the latter, a revised interpretive approach based on a justification test is essential. A justification approach would avoid the need to evaluate whether the material or activity is OCP vis-à-vis parental beliefs; it would instead accept that an interference exists and look to examine whether that interference can be justified. Critically, given the aim of the P1-2, societal interests should not be considered a legitimate ground of restriction under this article. That would risk giving the state a self-interested means to justify its proposed compulsory measure, a measure which after all will constitute a form of monopolisation, benign or not. Instead – and in keeping with the ECtHR’s developing jurisprudence – any restriction of the parental right should be justifiable only with reference to the rights of the child.

The proposed justification approach not only more closely meets the aim of preventing state monopolisation in education and alleviating the tensions resulting from the current singular focus on the OCP norm. It critically allows human rights law to perform better the function for which it is fundamentally fashioned, namely, it offers a clearer framework and an enlarged space for a constructive debate of highly contentious matters. The education of children and young people will always evoke strong emotions and discussion, particularly so where issues of morals, beliefs and religion are involved. Human rights law cannot be expected to resolve controversies to the satisfaction of all parties; no approach can achieve that. However, the proposed review creates a forum for the state to clarify and publicly defend its decisions within a well-defined rights framework and this, it is argued, constitutes a realistic and achievable ideal.

Footnotes

The author would like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their very helpful comments on an earlier draft of this paper.

References

1 See eg R Thorp and E Persson ‘On historical thinking and the history educational challenge’ (2020) 52 Educational Philosophy and Theory 891.

2 Recent debates include legal challenges to the removal of Catholic catechism classes in public schools in Poland (see https://notesfrompoland.com/2024/04/11/church-criticises-polish-government-for-removing-catholic-catechism-from-school-grade-average/ (accessed 22 May 2025)) and legislation banning non-traditional sexual orientation propaganda in schools in Bulgaria (see https://www.lemonde.fr/en/international/article/2024/08/11/bulgaria-law-banning-lgbtq-propaganda-in-schools-provokes-outrage_6712709_4.html (accessed 22 May 2025)).

3 In England and Wales, for example, the right to withdraw has its origins in the Education Act 1870 and grew out of a recognition that children should not be instructed in religious doctrines that conflict with their parents’ beliefs.

4 For a detailed account of faith-based objections to sexual orientation and gender identity content in primary schools in Birmingham and elsewhere see P Johnson and S Falcetta ‘The inclusion of sexual orientation and gender identity in relationships education: faith-based objections and the European Convention on Human Rights’ (2022) 3 European Convention on Human Rights Law Review 90 at 103–107.

5 ‘Tory revolt over graphic sexual content taught to children in school’ (The Telegraph, March 2023) https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2023/03/07/tory-revolt-graphic-sexual-content-taught-children-school/ (accessed 22 May 2025).

6 Curriculum and Assessment (Wales) Act 2021; Curriculum for Wales: Relationships and Sexuality Education (RSE) available at https://www.gov.wales/curriculum-wales-relationships-and-sexuality-education-rse-code (accessed 22 May 2025).

7 Ibid, RSE Code, p 5.

8 R (Isherwood & Others) v Welsh Ministers [2022] 3 All ER 123; see below for detailed discussion of this case.

9 Exceptionally, in response to a 2018 recommendation made by UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, a duty on all post-primary schools in Northern Ireland was introduced in 2023 to teach pupils about the legal right to an abortion and prevention of early pregnancy. Pupils may be opted out of this teaching.

11 Scottish Catholic Education Service ‘Relationships sexual health and parenting: call for responses’ (15 November 2023) https://sces.org.uk/relationships-sexual-health-and-parenting-respond-to-scottish-government-consultation-by-23rd-november/ (accessed 22 May 2025); Evangelical Alliance ‘Changes to RSE in Northern Ireland’ (3 August 2023) https://www.eauk.org/news-and-views/relationships-and-sexuality-education-in-ni-is-changing-heres-how-you-can-respond (accessed 22 May 2025).

12 See eg ‘Compulsory religious education “may breach human rights”’ (BBC, 6 February 2020), https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-51407327 (accessed 22 May 2025). The approach would also cause conflict in instances where parents object to their children visiting religious sites belonging to religions other than their own, such as mosques and synagogues. Objections of this nature have been encountered in the past and have been resolved due to the existence of an unfettered right of exemption. See eg T Wilson ‘How to handle concern about a planned mosque visit’ (JKP Blog, 16 November 2017) https://blog.jkp.com/2017/11/how-to-handle-concern-about-a-planned-mosque-visit/ (last accessed 21 November 2024).

13 Eg International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), Art 18(4); International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Art (3).

14 Folgerø and Others v Norway Application No 15472/02 (2007) (Folgerø) para 84.

15 Eg Johnson and Falcetta, above n 4, at 133, where the authors note, ‘It seems certain that individuals and faith-based groups opposed to SOGI [sexual orientation and gender identity] content in primary school education will take legal action against the statutory framework regulating RE [Relationship Education] in the English courts and, if unsuccessful, in the ECtHR.’

16 The task of drafting the initial provisions of the ECHR fell to the Committee on Legal and Administrative Questions of the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe. The Committee was made up by political and legal delegates from each of the Member States. Final agreement on the Convention text was the outcome of terse compromises between the Council of Ministers and the Consultative Assembly.

17 Council of Europe Preparatory Work on Article 2 of the Protocol to the Convention CDH (67) 2 (1967) p 5.

18 Ibid, pp 85–89.

19 Ibid, p 81.

20 Ibid, p 12. The UDHR was adopted in December 1948. Article 26(3) provides that ‘Parents have a prior right to choose the kind of education that shall be given to their children’.

21 Ibid, p 6.

22 Ibid, p 22.

23 Ibid, p 24.

24 Ibid, p 178.

25 See, for example, the contributions of Mr Sweetman (Ireland) and Mr Schmal (Netherlands), ibid, p 20 and p 38 respectively.

26 On the principle of subsidiarity see Catechism of the Catholic Church (Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1992); on the concepts of sphere sovereignty and structural pluralism see A Kuyper ‘Sphere sovereignty’ in JD Bratt (ed) Abraham Kuyper: A Centennial Reader (Carlisle: Paternoster, 1998) p 466; J Chaplin Herman Dooyeweerd: Christian Philosopher of State and Civil Society (University of Notre Dame Press, 2011).

27 Above n 17, p 194. Mr Teitgen acted as the Committee Rapporteur in discussions before the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe.

28 See eg ICCPR, Art 18.

29 Case “relating to certain aspects of the laws on the use of languages in education in Belgium” v Belgium 1968, ‘The Belgian Linguistic Case’ Application Nos 1474/62; 1677/62; 1691/62; 1769/63; 1994/63; 2126/64; (1968) para 3 of B. Interpretation adopted by the Court. The case concerned which language could be used when teaching children in public schools in Belgium. The Court had concluded that the second sentence of P1-2 was ‘irrelevant to the problems raised in the present case’, para 6 of B. Interpretation adopted by the Court.

30 Ibid, para 4 of B. Interpretation adopted by the Court. It further held that for the right to be effective there must be official recognition of the studies completed in the school of choice.

31 Ibid, para 5 of B. Interpretation adopted by the Court.

32 Kjeldsen, Busk Madsen and Pedersen v Denmark Application Nos 5095/71; 5920/72; 5926/72 (1976).

33 Ibid, para 48.

34 Ibid, para 53.

35 Ibid.

36 Ibid, para 54.

37 Ibid.

38 Ibid.

39 For discussion of the application of the OCP norm, see I Leigh ‘Objective, critical and pluralistic? Religious education and human rights in the European public sphere’ in L Zucca and C Ungureanu (eds) Law, State and Religion in the New Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015) p 192; J Temperman ‘Half-hearted support to pluralist curriculum building: the case of religion’ (2022) 11 Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 109.

40 A similar approach was taken the UN Human Rights Committee in Hartikainen et al v Finland with respect to the obligation found in Art 18(4) of the ICCPR. The Committee held that opt-out provision must be provided when teaching is found not to be ‘neutral and objective’: Hartikainen et al v Finland CCPR/C/12/D/40/1978.

41 Above n 29, para 56.

42 Ibid, para 52.

43 Eg Hasan and Eylem Zengin v Turkey Application No 1448/04 (2007); Mansur Yalçın and Others v Turkey Application No 21163/11 (2014) and LR v Switzerland Application No 22338/15 (2017).

44 See eg Efstratiou v Greece Application No 77/1996/696/888 (1996) para 28.

45 Art 17: Nothing in this Convention may be interpreted as implying for any State, group or person any right to engage in any activity or perform any act aimed at the destruction of any of the rights and freedoms set forth herein or at their limitation to a greater extent than is provided for in the Convention.

46 Folgerø, above n 14.

47 This complexity was compounded by the need to examine a scheme of ‘differentiated teaching’ introduced by Norwegian state whereby children whose parents had requested an exemption to respect for their convictions would remain in the class and observe a religious activity rather than participate in it.

48 Above n 46, para 89. The Court was explicit in noting that ‘the fact that knowledge about Christianity represented a greater part of the Curriculum for primary and lower secondary schools than knowledge about other religions and philosophies cannot … on its own be viewed as a departure from the principles of pluralism and objectivity amounting to indoctrination’.

49 Ibid, para 95.

50 Ibid, para 96.

51 The Court noted that the teaching must take as a starting point the direction of the Christian object clause when delivering the subject. The clause is found in s 1-2(5) of the Education Act 1998: ‘The object of primary and lower secondary education shall be, in agreement and cooperation with the home, to help give pupils a Christian and moral upbringing…’.

52 Above n 46, para 100. See paras 97–99 for the Court’s full reasoning in reaching this conclusion.

53 See, for example, para 84(h) of the Folgerø judgment, where the Kjeldsen norm is repeated as follows: ‘… the State in fulfilling the functions assumed by it in regard to education and teaching, must take care that information or knowledge included in the curriculum is conveyed in an objective, critical and pluralistic manner. The State is forbidden to pursue an aim of indoctrination that might be considered as not respecting parents’ religious and philosophical convictions. That is the limit that must not be exceeded.’ This lack of clarity has the potential to lead to confusion in the application of P1-2 norms at a national level, the consequence of which is explored further below.

54 See eg A Mawhinney ‘The opt-out clause: imperfect protection for the right to freedom of religion in schools’ (2006) Education Law Journal 1.

55 A wider interpretation has also been attributed to the norm in the academic literature, see eg J Bergland ‘Swedish religion education in public schools – objective and neutral or a marination into Lutheran Protestantism’ (2022) 11 Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 109 at 110.

56 R (Fox) v Secretary of State for Education [2023] 1 All ER 456. The claimants, inter alia, sought judicial review of a statement by the Secretary of State asserting that the subject content of the new GCSE Religious Studies subject was consistent with the statutory requirements for the provision of religious education when the subject content allowed for the complete exclusion of any study of non-religious belief for the whole of Key Stage 4.

57 Ibid, para [74].

58 Ibid, para [39].

59 Ibid.

60 As noted above, the Court’s failure to explicitly state its interpretative principles is unhelpful and clearly does lead to confusion at times at a domestic level.

61 See for example commentary in N Fancourt ‘From statutory localism to Strasbourg jurisprudence: the changing legal place of humanism in religious education in England’ (2024) Journal of Beliefs & Values 1; R Wareham ‘Achieving pluralism? A critical analysis of the inclusion of non-religious worldviews in RE policy in England and Wales after R (Fox) v Secretary of State for Education’ (2022) 44 British Journal of Religious Education 455.

62 JR87 [2022] NIQB 53.

63 Ibid, para [118].

64 Ibid, para [122].

65 Welsh Government Consultation on Proposals to Ensure Access to the Full Curriculum for All Learners, Number WG39139 (October 2019) p 7, para 3. For a comprehensive treatment of the curriculum changes in Wales see R Sandberg Religion in Schools: Learning Lessons from Wales (London: Anthem Press, 2022).

66 R (Isherwood & Others) v Welsh Ministers, above n 8.

67 Ibid, paras [197] and [202]–[208].

68 JR87 [2024] NICA 34.

69 Ibid, para [68]. As the Court put it at [103], ‘If the state is pursuing the forbidden aim of indoctrination why on earth would it furnish the necessary safeguard to frustrate its own objective?’

70 Ibid, paras [64]–[65].

71 Ibid, para [68].

72 In its closing remarks the Court noted that the subject matter was currently subject to an overarching government review and recognised the proper role of political actors in such matters; it suggested that policymakers may soon implement a ‘refresh to the NI curriculum and that will inevitably include consideration of religious instruction to take into account the complexion and changing needs of our modern society’: para [110].

73 Lautsi v Italy Application No 30814/06 (2011), para 66.

74 Valasmis v Greece Application No 21787/93 (1996), para 31.

75 Petrovy v Russia Application No 47429/09 (2021), para 65. The case concerned a young boy’s presence at a religious ceremony organised at the school at the start of the academic year.

76 Ibid, para 66.

77 Mansur Yalçın and Others v Turkey Application No 21163/11 (2014), paras 71–75.

78 As Leigh notes with respect to the Court’s assessment of a conflict between parental convictions and curriculum content: ‘Even the most “objective” treatments of religion in the classroom are likely to be found as objectionable by some parents of religious or atheist conviction’, above n 39, at p 201. Malcolm Evans, in commenting on the role of a court in this assessment process, has noted that ‘This raises the question whether it is appropriate for a Court, in the exercise of its jurisdiction relating to the protection of human rights, to decide who is right or who is wrong, when what is really at issue concerns perceptions rather than facts or other matters capable of objective determination’: M Evans ‘State neutrality and religion in Europe: what’s the prospect?’ (2022) 11 Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 4 at 15.

79 See eg İzzettin Doğan and Others v Turkey Application No 62649/10 (2016), para 69; Kovaļkovs v Latvia Application No 35021/05 (2012), para 60; Executief van de Moslims van België and Others v Belgium Application Nos 16760/22, 16849/22, 16850/22 (2024), para 86.

80 Occasionally, it may examine more closely a claim it considers particularly suspect and without foundation. However, its established approach in Art 9 cases is summed up in its repeated expression that ‘But for very exceptional cases, the right to freedom of religion as guaranteed under the Convention excludes any discretion on the part of the State to determine whether religious beliefs or the means used to express such beliefs are legitimate’: see eg Hasan and Chaush v Bulgaria Application No 30985/96 (2000), para 78; Osmanoğlu and Kocabaş v Switzerland Application No 29086/12 (2017), para 85.

81 R Sandberg Law and Religion (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011) p 83.

82 Osmanoğlu and Kocabaş v Switzerland Application No 29086/12 (2017).

83 Ibid, para 89.

84 Ibid, paras 63–64.

85 Ibid, para 97.

86 Ibid, para 98.

87 AR and LR v Switzerland Application No 22338/15 (2017). The Court decided that the application was inadmissible (manifestly ill-founded) and thus did not find it necessary to decide on the applicability of Art 9 given that the complaint had not been substantiated and, in any event, concluded that a violation of Art 9 could be ruled out essentially for the same reasons as those given in respect of Art 8.

88 Council of Europe Information Note 214, Case-law of the European Court of Human Rights, January 2018, p 19.

89 Above n 87, paras 40–41.

90 Above n 16, p 12.

91 Ibid, p 13.

92 The margin of appreciation principle arises from Court’s long-standing principle that, because of their ‘direct and continuous contact with the vital forces of their countries’, it is for national authorities to decide how to secure the rights found in the ECHR. In doing so, states enjoy a margin of appreciation subject to the supervisory jurisdiction of the ECtHR: Handyside v UK Application No 5493/72 (1976), para 48.

93 The Court has stated that it ‘accepts that it has a duty in principle to respect the States’ decisions in these matters, including the place they accord to religion, provided that those decisions do not lead to a form of indoctrination’: see eg Lautsi v Italy, above n 73, paras 69–70; Petrovy v Russia, above n 75, para 63.

94 Konrad and Others v Germany (2006) Application No 35504/03. The case dealt with a refusal to allow parents to educate their children at home in order to avoid participation in certain classes.

95 Valasmis v Greece, above n 74, para 31.

96 Above n 16, p 17.

97 Ibid, p 14.

98 Ibid, p 16.

99 For an argument that sexuality education should be seen primarily as a child’s human right, independent of state discretion and/or parental rights, see A Daly and C O’Sullivan ‘Sexuality education and international standards: insisting upon children’s rights’ (2020) 42 Human Rights Quarterly 835.

100 Macate v Lithuania Application No 61435/19 (2023), p 204.

101 Ibid.