Religious healing parents have vexed state courts for almost a century. Religious healing is the belief that prayer or spiritual means, rather than modern medicine, can cure individuals. Adults and emancipated minors have the right to refuse medical treatment. Some states go further and grant religious healing parents a statutory exemption against criminal and civil actions for child endangerment, neglect, negligence, manslaughter, and even homicide. This Article identifies these types of exemptions as an issue of religious childrearing. Religious healing exemptions demonstrate the difficulty delineating the line between childrearing rights of parents and the state\u27s duty to protect children. Professor James Dwyer argues that exempt...
Florida\u27s religious accommodation statute leads some parents to believe that they are free to rel...
Increasingly, people are claiming that practicing their religion gives them a right to inflict injur...
In Walker v. Superior Court, the California Supreme Court held that the criminal prosecution for inv...
Religious healing parents have vexed state courts for almost a century. Religious healing is the bel...
This Article argues that statutory exemptions in child abuse and neglect laws that exclude from thei...
This Article asks why any state would have religious exemptions that promote the religious practice ...
The story of children who die because their parents, in observance of their own religious principles...
This comment examines the historically uncertain balance between an individual\u27s right to freely ...
This Article analyzes the conflict between statutory child abuse reporting requirements for clergy a...
Accordingly, in light of this struggle to balance public health with religious liberty, this Article...
In order to analyze the religious exemptions, this paper will begin with their history. Part II look...
Criminal liability of parents who treat their children\u27s illnesses through spiritual means or pra...
Traditionally, minors are subject to their parents\u27 will when it comes to their own healthcare tr...
Daycare facilities are subject to a host of regulations that govern matters from basic health and sa...
In the United States, parental rights have been defined by a strong liberal conception of individual...
Florida\u27s religious accommodation statute leads some parents to believe that they are free to rel...
Increasingly, people are claiming that practicing their religion gives them a right to inflict injur...
In Walker v. Superior Court, the California Supreme Court held that the criminal prosecution for inv...
Religious healing parents have vexed state courts for almost a century. Religious healing is the bel...
This Article argues that statutory exemptions in child abuse and neglect laws that exclude from thei...
This Article asks why any state would have religious exemptions that promote the religious practice ...
The story of children who die because their parents, in observance of their own religious principles...
This comment examines the historically uncertain balance between an individual\u27s right to freely ...
This Article analyzes the conflict between statutory child abuse reporting requirements for clergy a...
Accordingly, in light of this struggle to balance public health with religious liberty, this Article...
In order to analyze the religious exemptions, this paper will begin with their history. Part II look...
Criminal liability of parents who treat their children\u27s illnesses through spiritual means or pra...
Traditionally, minors are subject to their parents\u27 will when it comes to their own healthcare tr...
Daycare facilities are subject to a host of regulations that govern matters from basic health and sa...
In the United States, parental rights have been defined by a strong liberal conception of individual...
Florida\u27s religious accommodation statute leads some parents to believe that they are free to rel...
Increasingly, people are claiming that practicing their religion gives them a right to inflict injur...
In Walker v. Superior Court, the California Supreme Court held that the criminal prosecution for inv...