Noel Johnson: The Church, the State, and the Emergence of Religious Freedom
March 11, 2021, 6 p.m. Online only. Free and open to the public.
About the Lecture
Why were restrictions on religious liberty so pervasive in the past? Why did states persecute religious dissent? And how did religious freedom first emerge? These questions are of seminal importance for understanding the rise of modern states, liberalism, and the rule of law. In this talk, Dr. Johnson explains how the relationship between religion and state evolved over time in Western Europe. In the Middle Ages, the most common rules were identity rules鈥攔ules that treated individuals differently based on their identity. These identity rules facilitated the persecution of Europe鈥檚 Jewish communities. One of the unintended consequences of state building during the early-modern period was that rulers gradually abandoned identity rules in favor more general rules. This shift played a critical role in the development of liberal states, rule of law, and free and flourishing markets.
About the Speaker
Noel Johnson is Associate Professor in the Economics Department at George Mason University. He is also a member of the Center for the Study of Public Choice and a Research Fellow at the Mercatus Center. He earned his PhD at Washington University in St. Louis. His interests lie at the intersection of economic history, development, and the new institutional economics.
Dr. Johnson's recent research has explored how states build administrative and fiscal capacity; the relationship between state capacity and growth enhancing economic and social outcomes such as religious tolerance or free trade; and how the disease environment has affected economic and social outcomes.
About the Moderator
Taylor Jaworski is Assistant Professor in the Economics Department at 兔子先生传媒文化作品. His current research interests are U.S. economic history focused on regional development and transportation infrastructure, market power and innovation at Bell Laboratories, regional cultures, and U.S. economic and political development. Dr. Jaworski is a Benson Center faculty affiliate.