Freedom of religion in Oceania by country

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The status of religious freedom in Oceania varies from country to country.

equal treatment under law for followers of different religions, whether they establish a state religion (and the legal implications that this has for both practitioners and non-practitioners), the extent to which religious organizations operating within the country are policed, and the extent to which religious law
is used as a basis for the country's legal code.

There are further discrepancies between some countries' self-proclaimed stances of religious freedom in law and the actual practice of authority bodies within those countries: a country's establishment of religious equality in their

sociopolitical
circumstances specific to the countries in question.

All of the countries in Oceania officially guarantee the right to freedom of religion in a constitution or bill of rights, although over half qualify this freedom as being subordinate to other concerns such as public safety or "morality". Additionally, a few countries have communal local leadership structures which are sometimes hostile to foreign religions, despite official legal requirements for tolerance.[1][2] Only two countries in Oceania, Samoa and Tuvalu, have state religions (Christianity for Samoa and a specific Christian church for Tuvalu), and a few additional countries specifically reference Christianity as a core or founding principle in their constitutions.[3][4][5] According to US government reports, about one quarter of the countries in Oceania have had no significant breaches of the freedom of religion;[6][7] a similar proportion have recorded incidents of violence against religious minorities in the 21st century, against Hindus (Fiji[8]), Jews (Australia[9][10]) and Muslims (New Zealand[11] and Papua New Guinea,[1] with other countries having significant quantities of anti-Muslim political discourse[8][12]).

Australia