The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Employment Division v. Smith has been widely criticized for decimating the Free Exercise Clause and leaving free exercise rights vulnerable. Critics maintained that the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Smith to shift protection of free exercise rights to primarily the political process would have devastating consequences for religious individuals. In Axson-Flynn v. Johnson, decided fifteen years after Smith, one of those consequences has become clear: a state university can constitutionally require an individual to swear as part of an acting program, even if swearing violates that individual\u27s deeply held religious beliefs. This result of compelled swearing is striking considering that for most of America...
The Supreme Court case of Employment Division v. Smith revived an older view of the Constitution\u27...
Employment Division v Smith was a monumental decision. The case overturned an iconic holding of the ...
Almost from the moment that the Supreme Court abandoned the religious exemption doctrine in Employme...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Employment Division v. Smith has been widely criticized for decim...
The Supreme Court wrongly decided Employment Division v. Smith. Without briefing or argument over th...
One of the more controversial decisions handed down by the Supreme Court in recent years was its dec...
This Note addresses the question left open by the Court and highlighted by Justice Thomas: under wha...
The United States Supreme Court has struggled to find a fair and consistent approach to cases in whi...
Much has been written about the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause when government reg...
What a difference three years can make. After a series of unhappy religious freedom precedents culmi...
Contemporary scholars have devoted ample attention to the Court\u27s free exercise jurisprudence. Th...
When the Supreme Court held in Employment Division v. Smith that the Free Exercise Clause does not p...
From all the talk about our religious pluralism—how extensive, indelible, inarbitrable it is—one wou...
In the 1990 case of Employment Division v. Smith, a sharply divided Supreme Court abandoned the rout...
I. The Early Insignificance of the Free Exercise Clause ... A. Free Exercise Violations Abridging th...
The Supreme Court case of Employment Division v. Smith revived an older view of the Constitution\u27...
Employment Division v Smith was a monumental decision. The case overturned an iconic holding of the ...
Almost from the moment that the Supreme Court abandoned the religious exemption doctrine in Employme...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Employment Division v. Smith has been widely criticized for decim...
The Supreme Court wrongly decided Employment Division v. Smith. Without briefing or argument over th...
One of the more controversial decisions handed down by the Supreme Court in recent years was its dec...
This Note addresses the question left open by the Court and highlighted by Justice Thomas: under wha...
The United States Supreme Court has struggled to find a fair and consistent approach to cases in whi...
Much has been written about the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause when government reg...
What a difference three years can make. After a series of unhappy religious freedom precedents culmi...
Contemporary scholars have devoted ample attention to the Court\u27s free exercise jurisprudence. Th...
When the Supreme Court held in Employment Division v. Smith that the Free Exercise Clause does not p...
From all the talk about our religious pluralism—how extensive, indelible, inarbitrable it is—one wou...
In the 1990 case of Employment Division v. Smith, a sharply divided Supreme Court abandoned the rout...
I. The Early Insignificance of the Free Exercise Clause ... A. Free Exercise Violations Abridging th...
The Supreme Court case of Employment Division v. Smith revived an older view of the Constitution\u27...
Employment Division v Smith was a monumental decision. The case overturned an iconic holding of the ...
Almost from the moment that the Supreme Court abandoned the religious exemption doctrine in Employme...