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Young Muslim women are coming under an increasing influence of globalisation processes and follow global trends, which also includes fashion. This entails a certain balancing act between being modern and being religious. The author of the present paper attempts to address the question whether the hijab may be considered a Muslim answer to globalisation through its presence within the so-called “hijab fashion,” or that perhaps, to the contrary, it constitutes a symbol of a growing isolation and separation of Muslim minorities inhabiting the countries of western Europe.
EN
The European Court of Human Rights has adjudicated on the cases of the presence of religious symbols in the public space several times. Those cases are strictly related to the issue of externalizing religion through clothing style. The author’s examination of this issue is based on analysis of the cases against France, where, since 2004, wearing religious symbols in public schools has been forbidden, and then, in 2010, covering faces in public places was also prohibited. On 1 July 2014 The European Court of Human Rights pronounced that these regulations are consistent with the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and do not transgress the freedom ofreligion.
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