The Supreme Court\u27s jurisprudence on church-state issues is unsettled. With respect to the Establishment Clause, the three-pronged test from Lemon v. Kurtzman is often used to hold government benefits to religious organizations unconstitutional. But, in cases where the majority of the Court finds the governmental benefit permissible, Lemon is generally unmentioned. This problem is confounded when the Court considers accommodations for religious organizations. Lemon, without refinement, is ill-suited to application to such accommodations. Does allowing religious organizations an exemption from generally applicable laws benefit a religious organization in violation of the Establishment Clause or does failing to provide the accommodation vi...
This article argues that state action that discriminates on the basis of religion is unconstitutiona...
Does excluding religious schools from a state-sponsored scholarship program amount to unconstitution...
When should employers be exempted from generally applicable law because of their religious beliefs? ...
Among the most vexing questions in the law of the religion clauses is when a legal measure that migh...
While statutes governing employer accommodation of employee religious practices have been challenged...
Supreme Court decisions based on the establishment clause in the U.S. Constitution have often drawn ...
This article sets forth five rules with respect to what government may do to accommodate religious p...
At the heart of national debate in recent years is the balance between religious liberty and anti-di...
In this Article, I propose an approach for deciding the limits that the First Amendment’s Establishm...
Cases arising under the United States Constitution\u27s religion clauses fall into four general cate...
Recent religious liberty scholarship has focused on the legal rights of churches and similar religio...
This Article critiques the constitutional underpinnings of the “ministerial exemption,” which grants...
On January 11, 2012 the United States Supreme Court ruled in Hosanna Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Scho...
Much has been written about the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause when government reg...
The Supreme Court’s recent decisions regarding the free exercise of religion threaten fundamental ch...
This article argues that state action that discriminates on the basis of religion is unconstitutiona...
Does excluding religious schools from a state-sponsored scholarship program amount to unconstitution...
When should employers be exempted from generally applicable law because of their religious beliefs? ...
Among the most vexing questions in the law of the religion clauses is when a legal measure that migh...
While statutes governing employer accommodation of employee religious practices have been challenged...
Supreme Court decisions based on the establishment clause in the U.S. Constitution have often drawn ...
This article sets forth five rules with respect to what government may do to accommodate religious p...
At the heart of national debate in recent years is the balance between religious liberty and anti-di...
In this Article, I propose an approach for deciding the limits that the First Amendment’s Establishm...
Cases arising under the United States Constitution\u27s religion clauses fall into four general cate...
Recent religious liberty scholarship has focused on the legal rights of churches and similar religio...
This Article critiques the constitutional underpinnings of the “ministerial exemption,” which grants...
On January 11, 2012 the United States Supreme Court ruled in Hosanna Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Scho...
Much has been written about the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause when government reg...
The Supreme Court’s recent decisions regarding the free exercise of religion threaten fundamental ch...
This article argues that state action that discriminates on the basis of religion is unconstitutiona...
Does excluding religious schools from a state-sponsored scholarship program amount to unconstitution...
When should employers be exempted from generally applicable law because of their religious beliefs? ...