In commenting on these rich papers by Michel Troper and Michael McConnell, I first analyze the implications of legal and political theory for religious liberty and separation of church and state. I then turn to underlying premises of modern liberal theory about moral education and tolerance among citizens. Lastly, I concentrate on separation as it affects the schooling of children. Despite Professor Troper\u27s emphasis on the uniqueness of French understanding and history, I was struck by how closely French problems about schooling, and their possible resolutions, resemble those in the United States
This paper examines how stances and understandings pertaining to whether home education is civically...
The wall of separation between church and state has been an abiding metaphor in the history of Weste...
Book review: Separation of Church and State. By Philip Hamburger. Harvard University Press. 2002. Pp...
In commenting on these rich papers by Michel Troper and Michael McConnell, I first analyze the impli...
Our country\u27s most important contributions to civilization are free, universal, common public sch...
In this article, the absence of an American equivalent to the French word laĭcité becomes an ethnogr...
Separation of church and state is right up there with Mom, apple pie, and baseball in American icon...
Professor Carl Esbeck argues in his article\u27 that the traditional theory of separationism is givi...
In this book I argue that school integration is not a proxy for educational justice. I demonstrate t...
Court cases over the past several decades have been consistent in following the constitutional manda...
Public education in the United States has seen many changes over the years. Some of those changes ca...
The problem of religious learning is that religion—including the teaching about religion—must be sep...
This article compares the constitutional protection of religious education in Egypt, Ireland, and No...
Here are three competing stories about how the idea of separation of church and state relates to the...
On March 15, 2004, in an act causing much unrest both domestically and internationally, the French g...
This paper examines how stances and understandings pertaining to whether home education is civically...
The wall of separation between church and state has been an abiding metaphor in the history of Weste...
Book review: Separation of Church and State. By Philip Hamburger. Harvard University Press. 2002. Pp...
In commenting on these rich papers by Michel Troper and Michael McConnell, I first analyze the impli...
Our country\u27s most important contributions to civilization are free, universal, common public sch...
In this article, the absence of an American equivalent to the French word laĭcité becomes an ethnogr...
Separation of church and state is right up there with Mom, apple pie, and baseball in American icon...
Professor Carl Esbeck argues in his article\u27 that the traditional theory of separationism is givi...
In this book I argue that school integration is not a proxy for educational justice. I demonstrate t...
Court cases over the past several decades have been consistent in following the constitutional manda...
Public education in the United States has seen many changes over the years. Some of those changes ca...
The problem of religious learning is that religion—including the teaching about religion—must be sep...
This article compares the constitutional protection of religious education in Egypt, Ireland, and No...
Here are three competing stories about how the idea of separation of church and state relates to the...
On March 15, 2004, in an act causing much unrest both domestically and internationally, the French g...
This paper examines how stances and understandings pertaining to whether home education is civically...
The wall of separation between church and state has been an abiding metaphor in the history of Weste...
Book review: Separation of Church and State. By Philip Hamburger. Harvard University Press. 2002. Pp...