This Article inquires into whether the singular purpose of the Establishment Clause is to secure individual rights, as is conventionally believed, or whether its role is more properly understood as a structural restraint on governmental power. If the Clause is indeed structural in nature, then its task is to negate from the purview of civil governance all matters respecting an establishment of religion. Conceptualizing the role of the Establishment Clause as either rights-securing or structural has profound consequences for the nation\u27s constitutional settlement concerning the interrelationship of government and religion
This article sets forth five rules with respect to what government may do to accommodate religious p...
It will be the purpose of this paper to examine the historical evidence available and determine whic...
Government neutrality toward religion is based on familiar considerations: the importance of avoidin...
This Article inquires into whether the singular purpose of the Establishment Clause is to secure ind...
The opening phrase of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides, Congress shall make no...
A survey of Establishment Clause doctrines and commentary reveals that the Clause is often interpret...
In this article it will be argued that the establishment clause, properly viewed, functions as a str...
The purpose of the Establishment Clause is not to safeguard individual religious rights. That is the...
The very first words of the very first amendment to the United States Constitution continue to frust...
In these reflections presented at a Symposium hosted by Duquesne University School of Law on The Fu...
The Establishment Clause forbids the government from engaging in the same religious exercise that th...
Recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions regarding the scope of the Establishment Clause have failed to p...
Recent religious liberty scholarship has focused on the legal rights of churches and similar religio...
While the jurisprudence of the Establishment Clause may not make much sense (common or otherwise) as...
The Establishment Clause has long been thought to protect two mutually antagonistic values, the sepa...
This article sets forth five rules with respect to what government may do to accommodate religious p...
It will be the purpose of this paper to examine the historical evidence available and determine whic...
Government neutrality toward religion is based on familiar considerations: the importance of avoidin...
This Article inquires into whether the singular purpose of the Establishment Clause is to secure ind...
The opening phrase of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides, Congress shall make no...
A survey of Establishment Clause doctrines and commentary reveals that the Clause is often interpret...
In this article it will be argued that the establishment clause, properly viewed, functions as a str...
The purpose of the Establishment Clause is not to safeguard individual religious rights. That is the...
The very first words of the very first amendment to the United States Constitution continue to frust...
In these reflections presented at a Symposium hosted by Duquesne University School of Law on The Fu...
The Establishment Clause forbids the government from engaging in the same religious exercise that th...
Recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions regarding the scope of the Establishment Clause have failed to p...
Recent religious liberty scholarship has focused on the legal rights of churches and similar religio...
While the jurisprudence of the Establishment Clause may not make much sense (common or otherwise) as...
The Establishment Clause has long been thought to protect two mutually antagonistic values, the sepa...
This article sets forth five rules with respect to what government may do to accommodate religious p...
It will be the purpose of this paper to examine the historical evidence available and determine whic...
Government neutrality toward religion is based on familiar considerations: the importance of avoidin...