This article was originally presented during a conference on “Hosanna-Tabor and/or Employment Division v. Smith” at the Institute for Law and Religion of the University of San Diego School of Law. At its most practical, the article tries to make sense of the puzzle that that motivated the San Diego conference: the dramatic divergence in our law between doctrines of individual religion-based exemptions from otherwise-applicable rules, which are increasingly under conceptual and doctrinal attack, and religious institutional autonomy, which was resoundingly reaffirmed in Hosanna-Tabor as a principle of self-conscious recognition of the authority and juridical dignity of religious institutions. More fundamentally, though, the article builds on...
This Article will refer to separationism as based on older assumptions. The Court\u27s presupposit...
This paper, prepared for a Symposium at the Benjamin Cardozo School of Law to mark the 20th annivers...
Constitutional law and religious law are often portrayed as diametrically opposed domains. While the...
That term “existential encounter” is meant to convey several important ideas. First, it suggests tha...
Commentators increasingly challenge religion’s privileged legal status, arguing that it is not “spec...
Should religion be singled out in the law? This Article evaluates two influential theories of freedo...
A metaphor has always dominated the Supreme Court\u27s religion clause jurisprudence. The metaphor p...
This essay examines two trends in modern church-state law. Parts I and II review the history of the...
Exemptions from laws of general application for members of religious groups are controversial. One r...
Inherent in the two Religion Clauses is the possibility of conflict: some accommodations of religion...
This article focuses on the relationship between freedom of religion and the norm against non-establ...
In this article, the author discusses the ways such as common law, and contracts employed by religio...
Recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions regarding the scope of the Establishment Clause have failed to p...
One of the recent fault lines over religious liberty is the scope of protections afforded religiousl...
A year and a half ago an article of mine was published on religion as a concept in constitutional la...
This Article will refer to separationism as based on older assumptions. The Court\u27s presupposit...
This paper, prepared for a Symposium at the Benjamin Cardozo School of Law to mark the 20th annivers...
Constitutional law and religious law are often portrayed as diametrically opposed domains. While the...
That term “existential encounter” is meant to convey several important ideas. First, it suggests tha...
Commentators increasingly challenge religion’s privileged legal status, arguing that it is not “spec...
Should religion be singled out in the law? This Article evaluates two influential theories of freedo...
A metaphor has always dominated the Supreme Court\u27s religion clause jurisprudence. The metaphor p...
This essay examines two trends in modern church-state law. Parts I and II review the history of the...
Exemptions from laws of general application for members of religious groups are controversial. One r...
Inherent in the two Religion Clauses is the possibility of conflict: some accommodations of religion...
This article focuses on the relationship between freedom of religion and the norm against non-establ...
In this article, the author discusses the ways such as common law, and contracts employed by religio...
Recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions regarding the scope of the Establishment Clause have failed to p...
One of the recent fault lines over religious liberty is the scope of protections afforded religiousl...
A year and a half ago an article of mine was published on religion as a concept in constitutional la...
This Article will refer to separationism as based on older assumptions. The Court\u27s presupposit...
This paper, prepared for a Symposium at the Benjamin Cardozo School of Law to mark the 20th annivers...
Constitutional law and religious law are often portrayed as diametrically opposed domains. While the...