
At ICAM, Martínez-Torrón explained why Spain stopped signing new religious agreements—and what that means for equality, funding, and rights.
At the seventh anniversary of the Canon Law Section of Madrid’s Bar Association (ICAM), a legal question arose: if Spain’s Constitution calls for cooperation with religious communities, why does it seem so uneven? The event, streamed online, combined institutional pride with a critical view of Spain’s approach to neutrality, cooperation, and equality in religious freedom.
An anniversary with scale—and growing public relevance
Opening the event, Mónica Montero Casillas highlighted the section’s progress: nearly fifty sessions and 734 registered lawyers at ICAM. This reflects a shift: church-state relations, once a specialist area, now affect public services, education, taxation, prisons, hospitals, and technology.
This practical frame influenced Professor Javier Martínez-Torrón’s keynote lecture, “State agreements with religious denominations: between neutrality, cooperation and equality.”
The constitutional anchor: neutrality is not indifference
Martínez-Torrón began with Article 16.3 of Spain’s Constitution: the State has no official religion, but must maintain “appropriate relations of cooperation” with religious denominations.
His argument was clear: cooperation is not a privilege—it’s essential for making religious freedom workable, involving chaplaincy, worship spaces, rites, education, and accommodations in public institutions.
He challenged the view that the 1979 agreements with the Holy See are historical favoritism, asserting that cooperation, neutrality, and equality shape religious freedom.
Bilateralism: the system Spain chose—and then paused
Martínez-Torrón noted a shift in his view, recognizing that abandoning bilateral arrangements could be destabilizing. The issue is not agreements’ existence, but their stagnation—since the 1992 cooperation laws, Spain hasn’t advanced new agreements with other recognized communities.
“Lots of religious freedom—too little specific cooperation”
He critiqued the 1992 agreements as more about baseline religious-freedom protections than “cooperation.” Rights treated as pact-based “benefits” can become exceptions rather than guarantees, exemplified by religious diets in public institutions.
Funding: the issue policymakers avoid naming
Funding was central to the session. Spain’s IRPF tax allocation lets taxpayers direct 0.7% to the Catholic Church, but other communities lack this choice.
Martínez-Torrón criticized the Pluralism and Coexistence Foundation as lacking transparency and causing dependency. He suggested taxpayers should decide, with the foundation focusing on cultural, social, and academic programs.
Spain has announced steps to align fiscal treatment and adopted a 2025 framework for direct subsidies to minority faiths with cooperation agreements, highlighting ongoing conflicts over criteria, equality, and accountability.
“Notorio arraigo”: recognition without a pathway
Martínez-Torrón argued that recognizing a community as “well-established” without agreements leaves it in legal limbo. Equality requires a system that avoids permanent provisional fixes.
Comments
17 responses to “Religious Equality in Spain: Why Cooperation Remains Stalled”
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Seems like Spain’s religious equality is as stuck as my last taxi ride in traffic. 🚦 Maybe they should just sign a cooperation agreement for a good cup of café con leche instead! ☕️😉
-
Just brilliant, innit? Spain’s got loads of religious freedom but can’t be bothered to sort out the paperwork—maybe they’re too busy enjoying tapas and siestas to actually cooperate! 😂
-
Oh, the irony! Spain’s concept of “cooperation” with religious communities seems to be just as effective as a chocolate teapot. 🍫☕️
-
Isn’t it charming how Spain’s approach to religious equality is like a fine wine—aged to perfection yet still corked? 🍷 At this rate, they’ll have cooperation agreements right after a pig flies over the Pyrenees! 🐷✈️
-
Looks like Spain’s got a real talent for keeping things equally confusing—great at talking about cooperation but not so much at actually doing it. 🤷♂️ If bureaucracy were an Olympic sport, we’d take home the gold! 🥇
-
Isn’t it delightful how Spain’s idea of “religious equality” is akin to a tapas bar—lots of choices, but none of them quite filling enough? 🍷🙄
-
Isn’t it charming how Spain’s approach to religious equality feels like a game of musical chairs—everyone’s invited but no one gets a seat? 🎶🙄
-
Seems like Spain’s idea of “cooperation” is about as clear as a foggy day in London—lots of talk, but no one’s actually moving! 🤷♂️ Just a classic case of everyone wanting to get along, but no one can play nice. 😏
-
Isn’t it just charming how Spain’s approach to religious equality seems to be a bit like a siesta—nice in theory, but essentially a snooze button on real cooperation? 😏
-
Isn’t it adorable how Spain’s idea of “religious cooperation” feels more like a game of musical chairs where no one’s actually invited to sit? 🎶 Just a bit of equality here, a sprinkle of funding there—who needs consistency when you can have a bureaucratic tango? 💃
-
Seems like Spain has found a new sport: dodging religious agreements like they’re a pesky mosquito at a seaside café. 🦟 Maybe next, they’ll add a “How to Achieve Equality While Stalling” chapter to their constitution! 😂
-
Quite the juggling act we have here, eh? Spain’s got more religious freedom than a tapas bar on a Friday night, but when it comes to cooperation, it’s like trying to get a cat in a bath! 😂
-
Seems like Spain is doing a brilliant job of making religious equality as clear as mud—who needs cooperation when you can have confusion, right? 😏
-
Funny how Spain prides itself on its “neutrality,” yet the only cooperation happening here seems to be a game of hide and seek with religious agreements. 🤷♂️ As if the Constitution is just a suggestion, eh?
-
Isn’t it charming how Spain’s religious cooperation is like a tapas menu with only one dish? 🍽️ While everyone’s craving a bit of equality, we’re still stuck nibbling on bureaucratic crumbs! 🥴
-
Seems like Spain’s approach to religious cooperation is like a tapas bar without the tapas—plenty of talk, but where’s the actual flavor? 🍷🤷♂️
-
Seems like Spain’s idea of “religious equality” is about as effective as a siesta at a job interview—plenty of talk, but not much action. 😏
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Comments
17 responses to “Religious Equality in Spain: Why Cooperation Remains Stalled”
-
Seems like Spain’s religious equality is as stuck as my last taxi ride in traffic. 🚦 Maybe they should just sign a cooperation agreement for a good cup of café con leche instead! ☕️😉
-
Just brilliant, innit? Spain’s got loads of religious freedom but can’t be bothered to sort out the paperwork—maybe they’re too busy enjoying tapas and siestas to actually cooperate! 😂
-
Oh, the irony! Spain’s concept of “cooperation” with religious communities seems to be just as effective as a chocolate teapot. 🍫☕️
-
Isn’t it charming how Spain’s approach to religious equality is like a fine wine—aged to perfection yet still corked? 🍷 At this rate, they’ll have cooperation agreements right after a pig flies over the Pyrenees! 🐷✈️
-
Looks like Spain’s got a real talent for keeping things equally confusing—great at talking about cooperation but not so much at actually doing it. 🤷♂️ If bureaucracy were an Olympic sport, we’d take home the gold! 🥇
-
Isn’t it delightful how Spain’s idea of “religious equality” is akin to a tapas bar—lots of choices, but none of them quite filling enough? 🍷🙄
-
Isn’t it charming how Spain’s approach to religious equality feels like a game of musical chairs—everyone’s invited but no one gets a seat? 🎶🙄
-
Seems like Spain’s idea of “cooperation” is about as clear as a foggy day in London—lots of talk, but no one’s actually moving! 🤷♂️ Just a classic case of everyone wanting to get along, but no one can play nice. 😏
-
Isn’t it just charming how Spain’s approach to religious equality seems to be a bit like a siesta—nice in theory, but essentially a snooze button on real cooperation? 😏
-
Isn’t it adorable how Spain’s idea of “religious cooperation” feels more like a game of musical chairs where no one’s actually invited to sit? 🎶 Just a bit of equality here, a sprinkle of funding there—who needs consistency when you can have a bureaucratic tango? 💃
-
Seems like Spain has found a new sport: dodging religious agreements like they’re a pesky mosquito at a seaside café. 🦟 Maybe next, they’ll add a “How to Achieve Equality While Stalling” chapter to their constitution! 😂
-
Quite the juggling act we have here, eh? Spain’s got more religious freedom than a tapas bar on a Friday night, but when it comes to cooperation, it’s like trying to get a cat in a bath! 😂
-
Seems like Spain is doing a brilliant job of making religious equality as clear as mud—who needs cooperation when you can have confusion, right? 😏
-
Funny how Spain prides itself on its “neutrality,” yet the only cooperation happening here seems to be a game of hide and seek with religious agreements. 🤷♂️ As if the Constitution is just a suggestion, eh?
-
Isn’t it charming how Spain’s religious cooperation is like a tapas menu with only one dish? 🍽️ While everyone’s craving a bit of equality, we’re still stuck nibbling on bureaucratic crumbs! 🥴
-
Seems like Spain’s approach to religious cooperation is like a tapas bar without the tapas—plenty of talk, but where’s the actual flavor? 🍷🤷♂️
-
Seems like Spain’s idea of “religious equality” is about as effective as a siesta at a job interview—plenty of talk, but not much action. 😏
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