The constitutional issues presented by the use at religious institutions of government-financed vouchers for social services have been addressed repeatedly, but virtually all of the writing in the field focuses exclusively on educational services. Most of that writing, moreover, takes the overly simple view that voucher programs are linear relationships running from government to recipient to service provider. Proponents of such programs argue that the presence of recipients as intermediate decision-makers breaks the link between the state and religion, and therefore solves the constitutional problem of church-state connection. Opponents argue that use of intermediaries is nothing more than money-laundering, and that the Establishment Cla...
The Court’s decisions permit a limited degree of public aid to be provided directly and a broader ra...
This thesis is being archived as a Digitized Shelf Copy for campus access to current students and st...
The U.S. Supreme Court in al man v. Simmous-Hanis held in June 2002 that a state does not violate th...
The constitutional issues presented by the use at religious institutions of government-financed vouc...
Symposium: Religious Liberty at the Dawn of a New Millennium held at Indiana University School of L...
With the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision (Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, 2002), upholding the vouchers...
The Supreme Court’s latest church-state decision opens the door to direct funding of religious insti...
This thesis is being archived as a Digitized Shelf Copy for campus access to current students and st...
This report details the constitutional standards that currently apply to indirect aid programs and s...
This piece focuses on the Supreme Court\u27s recent decision in Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, the Clevel...
Reflecting market rhetoric but also potentially advancing spiritual and religious values, school vou...
The issue of public funding of religious institutions in education is bound up with the establishmen...
Since 1996, Congress has included charitable choice provisions in several social welfare statutes to...
Since Mueller vs. Allen (1983), several legal decisions have attempted to clarify what is the approp...
A pressing legal issue at the close of the millennium is the use of public tax dollars to assist par...
The Court’s decisions permit a limited degree of public aid to be provided directly and a broader ra...
This thesis is being archived as a Digitized Shelf Copy for campus access to current students and st...
The U.S. Supreme Court in al man v. Simmous-Hanis held in June 2002 that a state does not violate th...
The constitutional issues presented by the use at religious institutions of government-financed vouc...
Symposium: Religious Liberty at the Dawn of a New Millennium held at Indiana University School of L...
With the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision (Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, 2002), upholding the vouchers...
The Supreme Court’s latest church-state decision opens the door to direct funding of religious insti...
This thesis is being archived as a Digitized Shelf Copy for campus access to current students and st...
This report details the constitutional standards that currently apply to indirect aid programs and s...
This piece focuses on the Supreme Court\u27s recent decision in Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, the Clevel...
Reflecting market rhetoric but also potentially advancing spiritual and religious values, school vou...
The issue of public funding of religious institutions in education is bound up with the establishmen...
Since 1996, Congress has included charitable choice provisions in several social welfare statutes to...
Since Mueller vs. Allen (1983), several legal decisions have attempted to clarify what is the approp...
A pressing legal issue at the close of the millennium is the use of public tax dollars to assist par...
The Court’s decisions permit a limited degree of public aid to be provided directly and a broader ra...
This thesis is being archived as a Digitized Shelf Copy for campus access to current students and st...
The U.S. Supreme Court in al man v. Simmous-Hanis held in June 2002 that a state does not violate th...