In Walker v. Superior Court, the California Supreme Court held that the criminal prosecution for involuntary manslaughter and felony child endangerment of a mother who withheld orthodox medical treatment from her ill child based on her religious beliefs did not violate free exercise. Citing the United States Supreme Court\u27s doctrinal distinction between the absolute protection of religious beliefs and the qualified protection afforded religious conduct, the court characterized such criminal prosecutions as constitutional restrictions on religious conduct. This Note argues that the Walker court was wrong. Because the court held that an express exemption for spiritual treatment in section 270 of the California Civil Code, a misdemeanor chi...
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution, made applicable to the states through the Fou...
Increasingly, people are claiming that practicing their religion gives them a right to inflict injur...
Criminal liability of parents who treat their children\u27s illnesses through spiritual means or pra...
In Walker v. Superior Court, the California Supreme Court held that the criminal prosecution for inv...
In the 1990 case of Employment Division v. Smith, a sharply divided Supreme Court abandoned the rout...
In Employment Division v. Smith, the Supreme Court famously held that the First Amendment Free Exerc...
Religious healing parents have vexed state courts for almost a century. Religious healing is the bel...
I propose that the free exercise of religion defense should only be permitted where the allegedly to...
The Supreme Court case of Employment Division v. Smith revived an older view of the Constitution\u27...
This Article uses the Supreme Court’s recent opinion in Christian Legal Societyv. Martinez as a poin...
Despite the relative prominence of religious expression in society\u27 and its elevated status in co...
Florida\u27s religious accommodation statute leads some parents to believe that they are free to rel...
Much has been written about the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause when government reg...
The 1973 Supreme Court decision in Wisconsin v. Yoder reenforced and amplified the Court\u27s earlie...
Inherent in the two Religion Clauses is the possibility of conflict: some accommodations of religion...
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution, made applicable to the states through the Fou...
Increasingly, people are claiming that practicing their religion gives them a right to inflict injur...
Criminal liability of parents who treat their children\u27s illnesses through spiritual means or pra...
In Walker v. Superior Court, the California Supreme Court held that the criminal prosecution for inv...
In the 1990 case of Employment Division v. Smith, a sharply divided Supreme Court abandoned the rout...
In Employment Division v. Smith, the Supreme Court famously held that the First Amendment Free Exerc...
Religious healing parents have vexed state courts for almost a century. Religious healing is the bel...
I propose that the free exercise of religion defense should only be permitted where the allegedly to...
The Supreme Court case of Employment Division v. Smith revived an older view of the Constitution\u27...
This Article uses the Supreme Court’s recent opinion in Christian Legal Societyv. Martinez as a poin...
Despite the relative prominence of religious expression in society\u27 and its elevated status in co...
Florida\u27s religious accommodation statute leads some parents to believe that they are free to rel...
Much has been written about the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause when government reg...
The 1973 Supreme Court decision in Wisconsin v. Yoder reenforced and amplified the Court\u27s earlie...
Inherent in the two Religion Clauses is the possibility of conflict: some accommodations of religion...
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution, made applicable to the states through the Fou...
Increasingly, people are claiming that practicing their religion gives them a right to inflict injur...
Criminal liability of parents who treat their children\u27s illnesses through spiritual means or pra...