The First Baptist Church court should not have required strict scrutiny of either the building code or the zoning ordinance applications. In reaching its decision, the court incorrectly analyzed Supreme Court decisions construing the free exercise clause, and drew mistaken parallels between the two Sumner ordinances and laws that the Supreme Court has identified as burdening religious freedom. The court should have distinguished between generally applicable laws such as Sumner\u27s building code and zoning ordinance that, in regulating the peripheral aspects of religious conduct, incidentally make a religious practice less convenient or more expensive, and laws that effectively penalize the practice of religion. The court should have req...
The first amendment guarantee of free exercise of religion, although couched in absolute terms, has ...
This five-part article examines the use of public school space for worship, arguing that the Second ...
This Note considers the standard of deference that civil courts should apply in cases where a religi...
The First Baptist Church court should not have required strict scrutiny of either the building code ...
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution, made applicable to the states through the Fou...
The Supreme Court\u27s recent decision in Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EE...
The United States Supreme Court, in denying certiorari, has allowed to stand a Fifth Circuit opinion...
In January, the Supreme Court decided Pleasant Grove City v. Summum. Summum, a religious organizati...
In Employment Division v. Smith, the Supreme Court famously held that the First Amendment Free Exerc...
It is difficult to analyze a Supreme Court decision that is as fundamentally misguided and unpersuas...
In Thomas v. Review Board of the Indiana Employment Security Division, the United States Supreme Cou...
The Supreme Court case of Employment Division v. Smith revived an older view of the Constitution\u27...
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution begins: “Congress shall make no law respecting...
The Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000 was Congress \u27response to the Su...
Many of the Supreme Court’s most tragic failures to protect constitutional rights—cases like Plessy ...
The first amendment guarantee of free exercise of religion, although couched in absolute terms, has ...
This five-part article examines the use of public school space for worship, arguing that the Second ...
This Note considers the standard of deference that civil courts should apply in cases where a religi...
The First Baptist Church court should not have required strict scrutiny of either the building code ...
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution, made applicable to the states through the Fou...
The Supreme Court\u27s recent decision in Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EE...
The United States Supreme Court, in denying certiorari, has allowed to stand a Fifth Circuit opinion...
In January, the Supreme Court decided Pleasant Grove City v. Summum. Summum, a religious organizati...
In Employment Division v. Smith, the Supreme Court famously held that the First Amendment Free Exerc...
It is difficult to analyze a Supreme Court decision that is as fundamentally misguided and unpersuas...
In Thomas v. Review Board of the Indiana Employment Security Division, the United States Supreme Cou...
The Supreme Court case of Employment Division v. Smith revived an older view of the Constitution\u27...
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution begins: “Congress shall make no law respecting...
The Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000 was Congress \u27response to the Su...
Many of the Supreme Court’s most tragic failures to protect constitutional rights—cases like Plessy ...
The first amendment guarantee of free exercise of religion, although couched in absolute terms, has ...
This five-part article examines the use of public school space for worship, arguing that the Second ...
This Note considers the standard of deference that civil courts should apply in cases where a religi...