Benson carries out written and research work, international lectures, government and private consultation, court appearances before all levels of court in Canada, media interviews and invited academic and government colloquia and panels, in various areas. In the early twenty-first century he was one of two non-nationals on the
Continuation Committee drafting the
South African Charter of Religious Rights and Freedoms under Section 234 of that country's constitution, and addressed the ceremony for the public signing of the charter in
Johannesburg in October 2010. Earlier that same year, Iain Benson delivered the keynote paper on religious inclusivity in Canada to the
Canadian Embassy to the
Holy See, and discussed the issues of accommodation of religion in the public sphere to the
Centre for Cultures and Languages in Africa. Benson works in the field of ethics and
constitutional law through his involvement with the South African Institute for Advanced Constitutional, Human Rights, Public and International Law, The Chester Ronning Centre in Alberta, Canada, and as Professor Extraordinary in the Faculty of Law, Department of Constitutional Law and Philosophy of Law at the
University of the Free State. In 2008 he was an invited panel respondent to Margaret Somerville's
"Ethics on a Wire" Keynote Address at the Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Canada and in 2009 addressed the American Political Science Association hosted by the
American Public Philosophy Institute with a lecture entitled "Standing Freedom on its Head: "Equality" and "Non-discrimination" and the Suppression of Democratic Liberties: Law, Liberty and Convergence". In November 2007 Benson was invited to submit a proposal to the Canadian Federal Government Policy Research Initiative on
"Religion and Public Policy". He wrote a background "think-piece" on religion and public policy in Canada entitled
"Taking a Fresh Look at Religion and Public Policy in Canada: The Need for a Paradigm Shift". He has also appeared before several Canadian government bodies, including the
Royal Commissions on
Education and New Reproductive Technologies and the Law Reform Commission formed to examine abortion. He has appeared before the
Senate Special Committee on
Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide, the
Senate Committee on
Banking and Finance (re: Pension Reform) and numerous
House of Commons of Canada Committees. Benson has been interviewed on
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation programs including "Ideas", "Tapestry", "Cross-country Check-up" and "Commentary". He has been interviewed on
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Vatican Radio,
Reuters and various radio stations in England and South Africa. Benson has acted as external reader of manuscripts for various presses and journals including
McGill-Queen's University Press(Montreal),
University of Toronto Press(Toronto),
Queen's Law Journal (Kingston, Ontario),
The Journal of Religion, State and Society (
Routledge, UK) and the
South African Journal of Human Rights,
Acta Theologica(South Africa). Benson continues to lecture across Canada, the United States, Europe,
Saudi Arabia and South Africa, giving papers on topics ranging from, constitutional law and religion, literature, the nature of the "secular", "secularism", "pluralism", and issues related to ethics and the accommodation of differing beliefs.
Legal philosophy and political theory Benson has published work on the accommodation of religious and non-religious rights, and has worked to promote the idea of shared civic virtues serving the common good across all belief communities. His published opinion is that all citizens have faith and belief in something, whether these beliefs are grounded in religion or not, and that the public sphere is obliged to act with balance. Benson's "Notes Towards a (Re)Definition of the 'Secular'" was cited by the
Supreme Court of Canada (in its landmark 2002
Chamberlain decision This work was cited with approval by Justice Albie Sachs in the 2005 decision of the
South African Constitutional Court in the
Fourie decision. Benson has argued that the Canadian approach to a pluralistic society has often overlooked the important role that religions play in the public sphere as well as in the lives of citizens and their groups. He contends that secularism is not neutral regarding religion, and that the term as most people have understood it excludes from "the public sphere" a key component of many citizens' identities, which is their freedom of conscience and religion. Benson further argues that a better understanding of the term "secular" would keep religion and the state jurisdictionally separate while allowing for co-operation and mutual understanding between them. The ultimate goal of this preferred philosophy would be to create a society in which individual and communal differences are accepted and embraced rather than one in which law and politics are viewed as building towards forced "agreement" or "convergence". A "think-piece" paper for the Canadian Federal Government's
Policy Research Initiative group on
"Religion and Public Policy" (January 2008) was an elaboration of some of his thinking on the issue and highlighted the need for a
paradigm shift in the way we approach religion and
public policy. It also outlined some of the implications this should have for government actions in relation to
multiculturalism in the public sphere, and legal decisions in relation to religious freedom and the principles of accommodation. More recently he has begun examining the tendency of legal decisions to remove from consideration the communal dimension of religious rights, and has written of the associational dimension of the freedom of religion and its importance to diversity, freedom and a pluralistic society. He is the co-editor with Tom Angier and Mark Retter of
The Cambridge Handbook of Natural Law and Human Rights (CUP, 2023) in which he wrote "Natural Law and Human Rights Amid the Legal Ruins of Liberal Skepticism, Values Language and Global Resets", and wrote the chapter on "Subsidiarity" in Nicholas Aroney and Ian Leigh,
Christianity and Constitutionalism (OUP, 2022). Benson is the author of articles dealing with civil liberties in relation to the Covid period 2020 to 2022 in which he was very critical of government overreach. Benson's writings are referred to in many scholarly books and articles and he is called upon frequently to review scholarly manuscripts, articles. He has examined graduate degrees (MTh and PhD, DPhil and DTheol degrees to date at universities in Hong Kong, UK, Europe, South Africa and the Middle East).
Other involvements and interests Iain Benson is a musician and a published poet. He was also the editor of Volume VII of the
Collected Works of G.K. Chesterton, contributing a critical introduction and several hundred footnotes to Chesterton's novels
Manalive,
The Ball and the Cross and
The Flying Inn. In 2001 Benson addressed the
Oxford University, C.S. Lewis society, and became a Knight of Magistral Grace of the
Sovereign Military Order of Malta. He has been in Canadian Who's Who since 2011. ==Publications==