What a difference three years can make. After a series of unhappy religious freedom precedents culminated in the Supreme Court\u27s horrible 1990 decision in Employment Division v. Smith, commentators were falling all over each other to insist that the Justices were allowing the Free Exercise Clause to disappear. In Smith, a department of the Oregon state government disciplined two employees who had violated state policy by using peyote, a controlled substance. The employees protested that the Free Exercise Clause was a shield, because they were adherents of the Native American Church and had used peyote as part of a religious ritual. Justice Scalia\u27s opinion for the majority dismissed the claim: the fact that the peyote use had religiou...
One of the more controversial decisions handed down by the Supreme Court in recent years was its dec...
The very first words of the Bill of Rights mark religion as constitutionally distinctive. Congress m...
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution, made applicable to the states through the Fou...
What a difference three years can make. After a series of unhappy religious freedom precedents culmi...
Employment Division v Smith was a monumental decision. The case overturned an iconic holding of the ...
Throughout the late 1980\u27s and into the 1990\u27s, there has been growing concern over how the ju...
The Supreme Court wrongly decided Employment Division v. Smith. Without briefing or argument over th...
Much has been written about the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause when government reg...
Two months ago, the Supreme Court struck down the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA), ...
From all the talk about our religious pluralism—how extensive, indelible, inarbitrable it is—one wou...
The Supreme Court case of Employment Division v. Smith revived an older view of the Constitution\u27...
A member of the Native American Church named Al Smith was fired from his job for using Peyote during...
While two recent Supreme Court cases on religious freedom appear sharply at odds, in one material re...
The Supreme Court has lost sight of individual religious freedom. In Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Luthe...
For several decades the peyotists within the Native American Church of North America have won numero...
One of the more controversial decisions handed down by the Supreme Court in recent years was its dec...
The very first words of the Bill of Rights mark religion as constitutionally distinctive. Congress m...
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution, made applicable to the states through the Fou...
What a difference three years can make. After a series of unhappy religious freedom precedents culmi...
Employment Division v Smith was a monumental decision. The case overturned an iconic holding of the ...
Throughout the late 1980\u27s and into the 1990\u27s, there has been growing concern over how the ju...
The Supreme Court wrongly decided Employment Division v. Smith. Without briefing or argument over th...
Much has been written about the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause when government reg...
Two months ago, the Supreme Court struck down the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA), ...
From all the talk about our religious pluralism—how extensive, indelible, inarbitrable it is—one wou...
The Supreme Court case of Employment Division v. Smith revived an older view of the Constitution\u27...
A member of the Native American Church named Al Smith was fired from his job for using Peyote during...
While two recent Supreme Court cases on religious freedom appear sharply at odds, in one material re...
The Supreme Court has lost sight of individual religious freedom. In Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Luthe...
For several decades the peyotists within the Native American Church of North America have won numero...
One of the more controversial decisions handed down by the Supreme Court in recent years was its dec...
The very first words of the Bill of Rights mark religion as constitutionally distinctive. Congress m...
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution, made applicable to the states through the Fou...