Each year in December, I attempt to pick the most important church-state and religious liberty developments of the past year. My choices are based on the importance of the pick to law or policy, regardless of whether the development has garnered significant media attention. With each pick, I link to one or a few of numerous postings on the topic. The selection of top stories obviously involves a good deal of subjective judgment. Indeed, as religion, culture and politics increasingly overlap, there are even questions about whether certain developments should be seen as "religion" stories at all. I welcome e-mail comment at religionclause@gmail.com on my choices. Here are my Top Ten picks:
1. Title VI investigations by the Department of Education and Title VI lawsuits by Jewish students proliferate as the continuing Gaza war triggers antisemitic and anti-Zionist demonstrations on campuses across the country.
2. States increasingly ban gender-affirming care for minors.
3. Voters in 7 states approve abortion rights ballot measures; proposals lose in 3 states.
4. Religion in public schools roars back as an issue: Bibles in the classroom, school chaplains, 10 Commandments in classrooms, released time programs.
5. Supreme Court punts on two sensitive issues: FDA approval of abortion pills (lack of standing), and whether federal law on emergency room care pre-empts state abortion bans (cert. improvidently granted).
6. Mixed results in suits by teachers who claim religious right to refuse to call students by their preferred pronouns as courts enjoin Title IX rules that protect transgender students from discrimination in schools.
7. Oklahoma Supreme Court says religious charter school is unconstitutional.
8. Indiana appellate courts say state's Religious Freedom law is violated when women are prohibited by from obtaining an abortion that their religious beliefs direct them to obtain.
9. Alabama Supreme Court says wrongful death statute covers destruction of frozen embryos. Legislature quickly reverses that result.
10. Dozens of cases brought by employees who were denied religious exemptions to Covid vaccine mandate continue to work their way through the courts with mixed results.