Religious property owners have both successfully and unsuccessfully challenged historic preservation ordinances as burdens on the free exercise of religion. Courts considering this conflict typically rely on Employment Division v. Smith, in which the United States Supreme Court held that neutral laws of general applicability that incidentally burden religion are not subject to strict scrutiny. Ambiguities in Smith, however, have left courts free to use their own interpretive discretion and have made attempts to apply free exercise precedent particularly difficult in the historic preservation context. This Note reviews the historic preservation movement and free exercise jurisprudence, then analyzes cases that have attempted to balance these...
This Note argues that the religious motivation test best secures the religious liberty guaranteed by...
Did late eighteenth-century Americans understand the Free Exercise Clause of the United States Const...
Almost from the moment that the Supreme Court abandoned the religious exemption doctrine in Employme...
Religious property owners have both successfully and unsuccessfully challenged historic preservation...
Much has been written about the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause when government reg...
This paper will analyze the tension between the historic preservation of sacred places and the free ...
Contemporary scholars have devoted ample attention to the Court\u27s free exercise jurisprudence. Th...
The United States Supreme Court has struggled to find a fair and consistent approach to cases in whi...
Using the dispute between the native tribes of northern Arizona and the federal government regarding...
Many states have historic preservation regulations that, as applied to properties owned by religious...
State courts should feel free to apply whatever test is most appropriate based on the textual provis...
In Employment Division v. Smith, the Supreme Court revised its jurisprudence of religious liberty by...
In the 1990 case of Employment Division v. Smith, a sharply divided Supreme Court abandoned the rout...
This Note addresses the question left open by the Court and highlighted by Justice Thomas: under wha...
The Supreme Court wrongly decided Employment Division v. Smith. Without briefing or argument over th...
This Note argues that the religious motivation test best secures the religious liberty guaranteed by...
Did late eighteenth-century Americans understand the Free Exercise Clause of the United States Const...
Almost from the moment that the Supreme Court abandoned the religious exemption doctrine in Employme...
Religious property owners have both successfully and unsuccessfully challenged historic preservation...
Much has been written about the protections afforded by the Free Exercise Clause when government reg...
This paper will analyze the tension between the historic preservation of sacred places and the free ...
Contemporary scholars have devoted ample attention to the Court\u27s free exercise jurisprudence. Th...
The United States Supreme Court has struggled to find a fair and consistent approach to cases in whi...
Using the dispute between the native tribes of northern Arizona and the federal government regarding...
Many states have historic preservation regulations that, as applied to properties owned by religious...
State courts should feel free to apply whatever test is most appropriate based on the textual provis...
In Employment Division v. Smith, the Supreme Court revised its jurisprudence of religious liberty by...
In the 1990 case of Employment Division v. Smith, a sharply divided Supreme Court abandoned the rout...
This Note addresses the question left open by the Court and highlighted by Justice Thomas: under wha...
The Supreme Court wrongly decided Employment Division v. Smith. Without briefing or argument over th...
This Note argues that the religious motivation test best secures the religious liberty guaranteed by...
Did late eighteenth-century Americans understand the Free Exercise Clause of the United States Const...
Almost from the moment that the Supreme Court abandoned the religious exemption doctrine in Employme...