For many years, religious organizations have engaged in employment practices of dubious legality under the federal anti-discrimination laws. Religious employers are rarely found liable under anti-discrimination laws-largely because the courts have chosen to construe the statutes narrowly. This approach has enabled courts to avoid the constitutional implications of striking down employment policies that reflect an employer\u27s religious convictions. After the Supreme Court\u27s controversial decision in Employment Division v. Smith, that approach may no longer be practicable. Smith prohibits exemptions from neutral and generally applicable laws on free exercise grounds. This Article contends that the federal anti-discrimination laws are neu...
Freedom of religion in the workplace has recently become a hot topic with regards to whether U.S. or...
While statutes governing employer accommodation of employee religious practices have been challenged...
The Supreme Court has lost sight of individual religious freedom. In Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Luthe...
When should employers be exempted from generally applicable law because of their religious beliefs? ...
This Article addresses the circuit split over whether Title VII prohibits discrimination based on an...
This Article critiques the constitutional underpinnings of the “ministerial exemption,” which grants...
A religious organization enters a contract with a builder to construct a new facility and breaches t...
Because the primary purpose of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was the elimination of racial discrimina...
Church authority to practice gender discrimination in employment decisions represents the collision ...
Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which forbids religious discrimination in employment, raises...
This Article summarizes the history of and recent trends for two aspects of the law regarding the in...
This article reports on the thick layers of law applicable to claims of religious exception to publi...
The principle that the government must not only refrain from providing special preference to a parti...
This Note evaluates the effect of the 1972 amendment to the Civil Rights Act, which clarifies that t...
The purpose of this article is to argue that the federal courts’ prevailing interpretation of Title ...
Freedom of religion in the workplace has recently become a hot topic with regards to whether U.S. or...
While statutes governing employer accommodation of employee religious practices have been challenged...
The Supreme Court has lost sight of individual religious freedom. In Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Luthe...
When should employers be exempted from generally applicable law because of their religious beliefs? ...
This Article addresses the circuit split over whether Title VII prohibits discrimination based on an...
This Article critiques the constitutional underpinnings of the “ministerial exemption,” which grants...
A religious organization enters a contract with a builder to construct a new facility and breaches t...
Because the primary purpose of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was the elimination of racial discrimina...
Church authority to practice gender discrimination in employment decisions represents the collision ...
Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which forbids religious discrimination in employment, raises...
This Article summarizes the history of and recent trends for two aspects of the law regarding the in...
This article reports on the thick layers of law applicable to claims of religious exception to publi...
The principle that the government must not only refrain from providing special preference to a parti...
This Note evaluates the effect of the 1972 amendment to the Civil Rights Act, which clarifies that t...
The purpose of this article is to argue that the federal courts’ prevailing interpretation of Title ...
Freedom of religion in the workplace has recently become a hot topic with regards to whether U.S. or...
While statutes governing employer accommodation of employee religious practices have been challenged...
The Supreme Court has lost sight of individual religious freedom. In Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Luthe...