The Center for Religion, Culture and Democracy has released its report 2023 Religious Liberty in the States. In this, its second annual report that measures state-level protections for religious liberty, the Center has added three new criteria, so that it now bases its state rankings on 14 types of state laws. The Report's Executive Summary says in part:
RLS has approached religious liberty from the perspective that people of any faith or no faith should be allowed to live in all areas of their lives according to their sincere beliefs. For that reason, we have not limited our analyses to activities that typically occur within houses of worship or activities of the clerical professions; we have defined religious exercise broadly. And while in 2022 it was not our intention to focus on any particular areas of life—rather, in our first project year we aimed to characterize the laws in areas where they were most clear—we note that in 2023 the new safeguards are noticeably more closely tied to religious ceremony or observance, narrowly understood. RLS continues to explore new items for future years and welcomes feedback from interested parties.
The Report ranks Illinois as highest in religious liberty protections and ranks West Virginia lowest.