Change in the First Amendment landscape tends towards the incremental, but the Supreme Court’s opinion two terms ago in Hosanna-Tabor v. EEOC — holding that religious institutions enjoy a range of First Amendment protections that do not extend to other individuals or organizations — is better understood as a jurisprudential earthquake. The suddenness and scale of the shift helps to explain the turmoil that has ensued in the lower courts and law journals. And yet, it could be that the biggest aftershock has yet to be felt. The Court left open the most important functional question that exists in scenarios where there will be constitutional winners and losers: what, or who, is a \u27religious institution\u27 for First Amendment purposes?The l...
This article focuses on the relationship between freedom of religion and the norm against non-establ...
textIn deliberating on the application of the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses of the United ...
Professor Leslie C. Griffin, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, will argue that the U.S. government ha...
Change in the First Amendment landscape tends towards the incremental, but the Supreme Court’s opini...
Change in the First Amendment landscape tends toward the incremental, but the U.S. Supreme Court’s o...
The Supreme Court\u27s recent decision in Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EE...
In its last few terms, the Supreme Court has decided over a half-dozen major religion clause cases. ...
In recent decades, religion\u27s traditional distinctiveness under the First Amendment has been chal...
The United States Supreme Court is surely guilty of making the matter of religion and the First Amen...
In its 2012 decision in Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Church & Sch. V. EEOC, the Supreme Court held ...
My dissertation explores the nature, source and scope of the rights of religious institutions in the...
This article attempts to explore from many vantage points one word within one context — the word “re...
The Supreme Court’s treatment of religion under the First Amendment has shifted significantly in the...
Although much has been written on the special place of religion in American law, there has been co...
Recent religious liberty scholarship has focused on the legal rights of churches and similar religio...
This article focuses on the relationship between freedom of religion and the norm against non-establ...
textIn deliberating on the application of the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses of the United ...
Professor Leslie C. Griffin, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, will argue that the U.S. government ha...
Change in the First Amendment landscape tends towards the incremental, but the Supreme Court’s opini...
Change in the First Amendment landscape tends toward the incremental, but the U.S. Supreme Court’s o...
The Supreme Court\u27s recent decision in Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EE...
In its last few terms, the Supreme Court has decided over a half-dozen major religion clause cases. ...
In recent decades, religion\u27s traditional distinctiveness under the First Amendment has been chal...
The United States Supreme Court is surely guilty of making the matter of religion and the First Amen...
In its 2012 decision in Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Church & Sch. V. EEOC, the Supreme Court held ...
My dissertation explores the nature, source and scope of the rights of religious institutions in the...
This article attempts to explore from many vantage points one word within one context — the word “re...
The Supreme Court’s treatment of religion under the First Amendment has shifted significantly in the...
Although much has been written on the special place of religion in American law, there has been co...
Recent religious liberty scholarship has focused on the legal rights of churches and similar religio...
This article focuses on the relationship between freedom of religion and the norm against non-establ...
textIn deliberating on the application of the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses of the United ...
Professor Leslie C. Griffin, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, will argue that the U.S. government ha...