Parental convictions can include views about punishment, but Article 2 does not give parents a right of veto (only a right to respect for their convictions) and a total ban on corporal punishment in schools was a reasonable means for a State to promote the welfare of children.
Parental convictions can include views about punishment. Article 2 was violated when a school, and educations system, refused to agree not to impose corporal punishment on a pupil.
Parental convictions about the undesirability of sex education for their children do not give them a right to remove their child from classes that are ethically neutral and based on giving information.
Parental convictions that require children to be taught specific, dogmatic views about morality or politics are unlikely to supported under Article 2, especially if a school is following an ethically balanced, pluralist and politically neutral curriculum.
Use Tab to navigate forward through the interactive quiz elements
Use Shift + Tab or ⇧ + Tab to navigate backwards through the interactive quiz elements
Use the up ↑ and down ↓ arrow keys to change radio button selections or dropdown selects
Use Spacebar to select checkboxes
Printed from , all rights reserved. © Oxford University Press, 2025