The religious questions doctrine states that courts typically refuse to adjudicate on religious questions. The two common rationales are a lack of judicial competence to decide religious questions (the pragmatic rationale), and the danger that allowing a secular court to decide religious questions enables state endorsement of one religion over another (the principled rationale). However, the rise of litigation involving religious questions means a rigid adherence to the doctrine is no longer tenable. This article focuses on addressing the pragmatic rationale, which has some implications for addressing the principled rationale. While the use of expert evidence on the religious question can mitigate judicial incompetence, this can itself give...
This article examines the long-term viability of the First Amendment prohibition on the adjudication...
Is it ever acceptable for a judge in a secular liberal democracy to rely on, and explicitly refer to...
Religious beliefs and values can play a significant and potentially necessary role in the judicial d...
This Essay argues that the source of judicial inconsistency in applying the U.S. religious-question ...
For nearly forty years, the courts have barred a variety of lawsuits by clergy against their religio...
Because federal and state constitutions forbid government from infringing upon religious liberty or ...
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court has shown an increasing unwillingness to engage in ...
Part I of this Article discusses Supreme Court cases prior to 1981, in which the Court first express...
At the 2008 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Law Schools, the program organized by the ...
Inherent in the two Religion Clauses is the possibility of conflict: some accommodations of religion...
What can judges and lawyers learn about religion from those whose field is religious studies, and fr...
Without a religious justification in the law, judges cannot fully justify their decisions in hard ca...
As the 1994 term drew to a close, tests for the Religion Clauses were in nearly total disarray. Ap...
Although the current state of the United States Supreme Court\u27s Religion Clause jurisprudence is ...
Religious arguments, i.e. normative arguments that rely on premises regarding God\u27s commands, rou...
This article examines the long-term viability of the First Amendment prohibition on the adjudication...
Is it ever acceptable for a judge in a secular liberal democracy to rely on, and explicitly refer to...
Religious beliefs and values can play a significant and potentially necessary role in the judicial d...
This Essay argues that the source of judicial inconsistency in applying the U.S. religious-question ...
For nearly forty years, the courts have barred a variety of lawsuits by clergy against their religio...
Because federal and state constitutions forbid government from infringing upon religious liberty or ...
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court has shown an increasing unwillingness to engage in ...
Part I of this Article discusses Supreme Court cases prior to 1981, in which the Court first express...
At the 2008 Annual Meeting of the American Association of Law Schools, the program organized by the ...
Inherent in the two Religion Clauses is the possibility of conflict: some accommodations of religion...
What can judges and lawyers learn about religion from those whose field is religious studies, and fr...
Without a religious justification in the law, judges cannot fully justify their decisions in hard ca...
As the 1994 term drew to a close, tests for the Religion Clauses were in nearly total disarray. Ap...
Although the current state of the United States Supreme Court\u27s Religion Clause jurisprudence is ...
Religious arguments, i.e. normative arguments that rely on premises regarding God\u27s commands, rou...
This article examines the long-term viability of the First Amendment prohibition on the adjudication...
Is it ever acceptable for a judge in a secular liberal democracy to rely on, and explicitly refer to...
Religious beliefs and values can play a significant and potentially necessary role in the judicial d...