Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Monday, March 13, 2006
Religious Freedom Issues In Tajikistan
Sunday, March 12, 2006
New Law & Religion Scholarship Online
From Bepress:
- Shelley Ross Saxer & Daryl Fisher-Ogden, World Religions and Clean Water Laws.
- Marc L. Roark, All in the Family: The Apocalyptic Legal Tradition as Crit Theory.
- Marc L. Roark, Understanding Jurisprudential Approaches to Islam.
- Mark Osler, Christ, Christians & Capital Punishment.
- Robin Charlow, The Elusive Meaning of Religious Equality, to appear in Winter 2006 Washington Univ. Law Review.
- Scott C. Idleman, Religious Premises, Legislative Judgments, and the Establishment Clause (recently posted online, though it appeared in the 2002 issue of the Cornell Journal of Law & Public Policy).
New Jersey Church Has Preliminary RLUIPA Win
Saturday, March 11, 2006
Workplace Chaplaincies Create New Legal Issues
Arizona House Moves On 4 Bills To Aid Parochial Schools
Another Israeli Election Ad Banned-- This Time For Religious Promises
Utah Schools Fear Cost of Distributing Notice On Religious Rights
Boston Catholic Agency Ends Adoption Services In Protest of Gay Adoption
The Globe also reports that Governor Mitt Romney said yesterday that he plans to file a bill that would exempt religious organizations from the state's antidiscrimination laws so that Catholic Charities and other religious groups could refuse to provide adoption services when doing so violates their faith.
According to the Associated Press, Massachusetts' four Catholic bishops earlier this month said that the law on gay adoptions threatens the church's religious freedom by forcing it to do something it considers immoral. Eight members of Catholic Charities board later resigned in protest of the bishops' stance. The 42-member board had voted unanimously in December to continue considering gay households for adoptions.
The Archdiocese of Boston has posted an interview with Dr. John Haas, president of the National Catholic Bioethics Center in Philadelphia, explaining the Church's position.
Kentucky Approves Ten Commandments On Public Property, As Roy Moore Presses the Issue Elsewhere
The bill, HB 277, permits the display in public buildings, on public property and in schools of historic monuments, symbols and texts if they are displayed in a balanced, objective and not solely religious manner. The display must neither favor nor disfavor religion generally or a particular religious belief. Also any display must promote Kentucky's historic, cultural, political, and general heritage and achievements. The bill also provides for the return to the Capitol grounds of a Ten Commandments monument that had been removed under court order in 2000 to a Fraternal Order of Eagles site. And the bill calls for posting "In God We Trust" in the House of Representatives chambers.
Meanwhile, former Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore, who is running for Governor of Alabama, is apparently speaking around the country pressing for the display of the Ten Commandments on public property. An interview with him was published today by the Toledo (Ohio) Blade, prior to Moore's appearance on Tuesday at a Toledo-area Christian school. The former judge, who was removed from office after refusing to obey a court order to remove a large Ten Commandments monument from Alabama's supreme court building, told the Blade: "I did not disobey the rule of law. I disobeyed the rule of man. No judge or person can put himself above the law he is sworn to uphold. And we are not sworn to obey such men, but the Constitution."
Friday, March 10, 2006
Montana Church Found To Have Violated State Campaign Restrictions
Alliance Defense Fund attorney Gary McCaleb claims the law unconstitutionally infringes on religious expression and free speech. He said: "It has a chilling effect on a church's speech. It means [the church] has to register with the state and jump through a bunch of election-law-reporting hoops merely for putting a few pieces of paper out in the foyer. It's a pretty outrageous extension of election law into the free speech realm."
California Supreme Court Upholds Antidiscrimination Pledge For Receipt of Subsidy
President's Remarks On Faith-Based Initiatives
As you know, this has been quite a controversial subject here in the United States Congress. We believe in separation of church and state -- the church shouldn't be the state and the state shouldn't be the church. No question that's a vital part of the country, and that's a vital part of our heritage and we intend to keep it that way. But when it comes to social service funding, the use of taxpayers' money, I think we're able to meet the admonition of separation of church and state and, at the same time, recognize that faith programs provide an important model of success. They help us achieve certain objectives in our country.The White House also issued a Fact Sheet, titled Compassion in Action: Producing Real Results for Americans Most in Need as well as a detailed report on grants to faith-based organizations in fiscal 2005.
Petition In European Court of Human Rights On Muhammad Cartoons
Complaint Against Air Force Proselytization Expanded
Impact of O Centro On RLUIPA Land Use Claims
Thursday, March 09, 2006
State Department Issues 2005 Country Reports on Human Rights
White House Conference Today Will Tout Faith-Based Programs
Rev. Barry W. Lynn, head of release yesterday criticized the President's Faith-Based program, saying: "The White House is using incense and mirrors to cover up its domestic policy failures. Presidential speeches and bogus reports about the faith-based initiative are no substitute for adequate funding of effective government programs."
Spiritual Leaders Urge Prison Sweat Lodge Be Limited To Native Americans
Israel Elections Committee Censors Anti-Religious Ad
Full California Board of Education Adopts Textbook Changes On Hinduism
Claims By Prisoners Permitted To Proceed
In Lewis v. Mitchell, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40814 (SD Cal., Oct. 5, 2005), a decision from last year that has just become available, a California federal district court dealt with a Muslim prisoner's claim that his religious liberty was infringed when he was deceptively served pork disguised as turkey. The court held that the prisoner must assert more than negligence to support his claim that his constitutional rights have been infringed. It found that he had asserted conscious or intentional acts against two of the defendants, but not against a third. The earlier Magistrate Judge's recommendation in the suit, also just released, is at 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40812 (July 11, 2005).
Wednesday, March 08, 2006
V.A. Slow To Recognize Wiccan Grave Markers
White House Developments On Faith-Based Initiatives
In a related matter, today at 11:00 a.m., Jim Towey, Director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, will conduct an interactive online discussion of the upcoming White House conference on the role corporations and foundations play in funding social services. The public may submit questions for Mr. Towey through the White House website.
Connecticut Bill Would Require Catholic Hospitals To Dispense Emergency Contraceptive
Sikhs Battle Montreal Port Authority Over Hard Hats
Colorado Bill Would Protect Employees From Employer Religious Indoctrination
Tuesday, March 07, 2006
New U.S. Restrictions On Religious Groups' Travel To Cuba Protested
Japanese Court Says Buddhist Pet Funerals Are Not Religious
Drivers' License Photos Pose Religious Issues
In Canada, in the southern part of Alberta, the Hutterite settlement, the Wilson Colony, has filed suit to challenge the province's photo requirement that came into effect in 2003. Hutterites believe that the Second Commandment prohibits them from willingly having their picture taken. Yesterday BBC News reported that as licenses in the small religious colony come up for renewal, individuals are not renewing them. Now there are only 15 licensed drivers left. The colony's lawyer, Greg Senda, says the colony is worried what could happen to their large scale farming operation if no one can drive. After the suit was filed claiming a violation of religious freedom, residents were issued temporary licenses while the case is being litigated.
Meanwhile, in France, the Council of State, France's highest administrative body, ruled on Monday that Sikhs must remove their turbans for drivers license photos, calling it a question of public security and not a restriction on freedom of religion. In December, the Council of State had ruled in favor of Shingara Mann Singh, who refused on religious grounds to comply with the administrative order to take off his turban for his license photo. That decision said that the wrong ministry had issued the order. A day later the Transport Ministry, the correct ministry, took steps to adopt the required order. That sent the case back to the Council of State. The Hindu reports that yesterday the Council of State ruled against Singh's religious freedom claim.
Cert. Denied In Washburn Art Show Case
Monday, March 06, 2006
Jail Canteen Funds To Churches Is Challenged
Does Today's FAIR Decision Implicate Christian Student Group Cases?
In today's decision, the Court rejected this argument in the context of the Solomon Amendment. It said:
According to FAIR, law schools' ability to express their message that discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is wrong is significantly affected by the presence of military recruiters on campus and the schools' obligation to assist them....This language might be read to suggest that placing a school's imprimatur on a student group by formally recognizing it does make it one of the "members of the school's expressive association", and forcing the school to recognize it would therefore unconstitutionally impair the school's associational rights.
The Solomon Amendment, however, does not similarly affect a law school's associational rights. To comply with the statute, law schools must allow military recruiters on campus and assist them in whatever way the school chooses to assist other employers. Law schools therefore "associate" with military recruiters in the sense that they interact with them. But recruiters are not part of the law school. Recruiters are, by definition, outsiders who come onto campus for the limited purpose of trying to hire students-- not to become members of the school's expressive association. This distinction is critical. Unlike the public accommodations law in Dale, the Solomon Amendment does not force a law school "'to accept members it does not desire'".
Religious Freedom Issues In Bush's Pakistan Visit
At the leaders' joint news conference on Saturday, President Musharraf answered a question about his efforts to promote democracy in Pakistan. He spoke of promoting freedom of speech and press, and empowerment of women, but not of freedom of religion. Bush's news conference statement said that he had discussed the Muhammad cartoon controversy with Musharraf. Finally, in their Joint Statement issued on Saturday, the Presidents mentioned religious toleration, but not in a manner that directly addressed the concerns of USCIRF. The Statement said: "The two leaders recognize the need to promote tolerance, respect and mutual understanding, and inter-faith harmony to strengthen appreciation of the values and norms common to the world's religions and cultures. The two leaders acknowledge with appreciation the various international initiatives in this regard including President Musharraf's concept of Enlightened Moderation. The two leaders agreed that acts that disturb inter-faith harmony should be avoided."
Israeli Justice Jockeying To Write Opinion On "Who Is A Jew?"
Sunday, March 05, 2006
RLUIPA Land Use Developments
In City and County of Honolulu v. Sherman (Feb. 28, 2006), the Hawaii Supreme Court held that a Hawaii statute (R.O.H. Ch. 38) that permits the city and county to file eminent domain proceedings to convert properties from leaseholds to fee simple ownership is not subject to RLUIPA because the law is neither a zoning nor a landmarking law. Therefore it does not constitute a "land use regulation" as RLUIPA defines the term.
The Associated Press reports that on Friday, a federal district judge released an opinion holding that RLUIPA prevents the Village of Mamaroneck in New York from using its zoning laws to block construction of a new 44,000 square-foot building by the Westchester Jewish Day School. The zoning board had raised issues of traffic, parking, esthetics and property values in denying the application to build the school in Mamaroneck's upscale Orienta Point neighborhood. Judge William Conner said that the board's denial, in 2001, "was so contrary to the evidence and to the equities as to be arbitrary and capricious." However, the judge stayed his order pending an appeal to the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals. The long history of the case is traced by this coverage of Friday's decision by the Westchester Journal News. UPDATE: The lengthy opinion is now available on LEXIS, Westchester Day School v. Village of Mamaroneck, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9058 (SDNY, March 2, 2006).
A recently published article reviews RLUIPA land use developments: Edwin P. Voss, Jr. & Meredith A. Ladd, Recent Developments Under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, 37 Urban Lawyer 449-466 (2005). [Thanks to SmartCILP]
American Legion Begins Campaign For Public Expression of Religion Act
Last week, the Legion released a booklet titled In The Footsteps Of The Founders  A Guide To Defending American Values, which gives background on PERA. The Legion is particularly focusing on suits against the BoyScoutss, and and attorneys' fees that have been awarded to ACLU lawyers. The booklet says: "There simply is no reasonable basis to support the profiteering in attorney fee awards ordered by judges in these cases. The very threat of such fees has made elected bodies, large and small, surrender to the ACLU's demands to secularly cleanse the public square."
Australia Keeps Church-State Status Quo
Muslim Prisoner Has Initial RLUIPA Win
Saturday, March 04, 2006
New York Attempts To Close Bars Too Near To Unknown Mosque
The Tribeca Trib this week reported that the New York State Liquor Authority has denied a license to one bar, and is threatening to close three others, because they are within 200 feet of Masjid al-Farah, a Sufi mosque. The problem, however, is that none of the bar owners knew that the mosque was there. Indeed some of the bars had been operating over 10 years without realizing the problem. The mosque's nondescript building has no signage on it indicating that it is a mosque. Moreover, mosque officials have no objection to the bars. The Liquor Authority asserted the violations of law after other neighbors objected to the noise and over-concentration of bars in the neighborhood. One bar owner has suggested a legal loophole-- he argues that Sufism is "more a philosophy" than a religion. The state's liquor law (Alcoholic Beverage Contol Law, Sec. 64) applies to establishments on the same street and within 200 feet of a building "occupied exclusively as a school, church, synagogue or other place of worship..."
Proposed Missouri Resolution Stirs Up Blogosphere
we stand with the majority of our constituents and exercise the common sense that voluntary prayer in public schools and religious displays on public property are not a coalition of church and state, but rather the justified recognition of the positive role that Christianity has played in this great nation of ours, the United States of America.One of the introductory "Whereas" clauses in the resolution declares, "our forefathers of this great nation of the United States recognized a Christian God and used the principles afforded to us by Him as the founding principles of our nation." The Resolution has been commented upon by more blogs than usual, in part because the first web posting about the resolution, by KMOV-TV, was headlined (inaccurately) "State Bill Proposes Christianity Be Missouri’s Official Religion".
Parliament May Remove Ban On Women As Bishops In Church of England
County To Place "In God We Trust" On Court House
Friday, March 03, 2006
Plaintiff Claims Capital Punishment Tradition Parallels Biblical Episode
Furor Over Appointment To Illinois Anti-Discrimination Commission
Even the Governor did not realize who Sister Muhammad was until last month, when she invited members of the Commission to attend a speech by Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan who has often virulently attacked whites, Jews and gays. The invitation led two Jewish leaders on the Commission to resign in protest. Lonnie Nasatir, regional ADL director and Richard Hirschhaut, executive director of the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center, resigned, saying that the Commission has been compromised by Muhammad's appointment. Now there are calls for Muhammad to disavow Farrakhan's remarks, but many black lawmakers say this is unfair when other members are not held responsible for everything their religious leaders say. Muhammad issued a statement Wednesday supporting "fairness to all people regardless of race, creed, color, national origin or religious beliefs."
Anti-Evolution Litigation Hits Russia
Judge's Order To Remove Bible Does Not Invalidate Conviction
Canada Supreme Court Strikes Down Ban On Kirpans In Schools
Greece Approves Cremation For Non-Orthodox
Paper Chronicles Neighborhood Battle Centered On Orthodox Jews
Thursday, March 02, 2006
Alito Thank-You To Dobson Raises Criticism
Rev. Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State strongly criticized Alito's note, saying, "Justice Alito should follow the commands of the Constitution, not the orders of Dobson and the Religious Right." Reviewing the tempest on the blog Politcal Cortex, James Clarkson comments "what is missed in all the commentary so far is that Alito expressed a desire to meet with Dobson. Even if it is true that he sent out a number of thank you letters and that it was routine, does he also want to meet with these supporters?"This is just a short note to express my heartfelt thanks to you and the entire staff of Focus on the Family for your help and support during the past few challenging months.... As I said when I spoke at my formal investiture at the White House last week, the prayers of so many people from around the country were a palpable and powerful force. As long as I serve on the Supreme Court I will keep in mind the trust that has been placed in me. I hope that we’ll have the opportunity to meet personally at some point in the future.
Democratic Catholic House Members Issue Statement of Principles
We are committed to making real the basic principles that are at the heart of Catholic social teaching: helping the poor and disadvantaged, protecting the most vulnerable among us, and ensuring that all Americans of every faith are given meaningful opportunities to share in the blessings of this great country. That commitment is fulfilled in different ways by legislators but includes: reducing the rising rates of poverty; increasing access to education for all; pressing for increased access to health care; and taking seriously the decision to go to war. Each of these issues challenges our obligations as Catholics to community and helping those in need....Connecticut Rep. Rosa DeLauro said Catholic Democrats did not want to see Catholic faith defined solely by a "one-issue, very narrow right-wing agenda." Cardinal Theodore McCarrick of Washington, who is heading a bishops' task force on how to respond to dissenting politicians, said he had not yet seen the statement, but said he was willing to continue informal discussions with Catholics in both parties. [Thanks to Mirror of Justice for the lead.]
In all these issues, we seek the Church's guidance and assistance but believe also in the primacy of conscience. In recognizing the Church's role in providing moral leadership, we acknowledge and accept the tension that comes with being in disagreement with the Church in some areas. Yet we believe we can speak to the fundamental issues that unite us as Catholics and lend our voices to changing the political debate -- a debate that often fails to reflect and encompass the depth and complexity of these issues.
California School Will Not Excuse Absence For Ash Wednesday Service
No Federal Court Jurisdiction In Priest Abuse Case
More Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Shaw v. Frank, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7231 (ED Wis., Feb. 15, 2006), a Wisconsin federal trial court held that allegations by a prisoner sufficiently stated free exercise and RLUIPA claims to permit his case to proceed. Terrence J. Shaw alleged that Wisconsin prison authorities terminated him from participation in sex offender treatment because of his religious beliefs, belittled and forced him to engage in exercises contrary to his religious beliefs during sex offender treatment, and refused to allow him to use his religious name.
In Shabazz v. Martin, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7207 (ED Mich., Feb. 9, 2006), a federal district judge accepted earlier findings by a magistrate judge that a prisoner's free exercise claims are not moot and that he adequately asserted equal protection claims. Plaintiff alleged that the use of prayer rugs and pendants by Nation of Islam religious members was prohibited, while members of other Islamic faiths were permitted to possess these items. He also alleged that he was denied transfer to another prison consistent with his security classification because of his membership in the Nation of Islam. The magistrate's recommendations are reported at 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40657 (ED Mich., Oct. 11, 2005).
7th Circuit Denies Stay Of Order Against Sectarian Prayer In Indiana House
Wednesday, March 01, 2006
US Muslim Group Says Closing Charities Interferes With Religious Duties
Private Town Planned Around Christian Teachings
UPDATE: In an interview on Friday with the Associated Press, Thomas Monaghan qualified many of his earlier statements. He said that mandatory restrictions will be limited to Ave Maria University. The town will be open to anyone, but it will be suggested to businesses that they not sell adult magazines or contraceptives. The town will not restrict cable television programming, and, according to the town's developer, it will not discriminate on the basis of religion, race, ethnicity or sexual orientation.
TRO Denied In Challenge To Navy's Chaplain Selection System
Church-State Tensions In Spain
Government spokesman Fernando Moraleda said, "This is a government that is deeply secular and reform-oriented," and it must adapt Spain to its position as a modern member of the European Union. Church supporters say Zapatero's government is anti-clerical and out of touch with Spanish society, which is more than 80 percent Catholic. Government moves aim at changing the constitutional balance between church and state that was created under Spain's 1978 Constitution, adopted after the death of the longtime dictator Gen. Francisco Franco. Clashes between the Spanish left and the church helped propel Franco to power during the 1936-39 Spanish Civil War.
Anti-Evolution Proposals In the West-- One Dies While Another Is Born
Meanwhile, the Las Vegas Sun reports that in Nevada on Tuesday, masonry contractor Steve Brown filed an initiative petition with the secretary of state's office. His proposal would require that students, by the end of the 10th grade, be informed that "although most scientists agree that Darwin's theory of evolution is well supported, a small minority of scientists do not agree." Several "areas of disagreement" would have to be covered in class, including the view by some scientists that "it is mathematically impossible for the first cell to have evolved by itself." Students also would have to be told some scientists argue "that nowhere in the fossil record is there an indisputable skeleton of a transitional species, or a 'missing link'", and "be informed that the origin of sex, or sex drive, is one of biology's mysteries" and that some scientists contend that sexual reproduction "would require an unbelievable series of chance events".
Brown will need to collect 83,184 signatures by June 20 to get his plan on the November ballot, and will have to get voter approval both this year and in the 2008 elections for the amendment to be finally adopted.
School Can Remove Religious Postings From Teacher's Classroom
The Associated Press report on the case indicates that Lee's postings included news articles about President Bush's religious faith and former Attorney General John Ashcroft's prayer meetings with his staffers; a flier publicizing the National Day of Prayer; and a depiction of George Washington praying at Valley Forge.
UPDATE: Steve Taylor, attorney for teacher William Lee, says he will appeal the decision to the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals.
Tuesday, February 28, 2006
Board Committee Meeting On Textbook Depiction of Hindus Is Contentious
Free Exercise Claim To Use of Hemp Rejected
More Questions Raised On Boston's Sale Of Land To Mosque
Jewish Group Endorses Principles Supporting Pluralistic Democracy
The resolution went on to deal with a number of specific issues in more detail It said that science and medicine-- including funding, research, availability of medicines and services, and appointments to governmental advisory boards-- need to remain independent from religious, political and ideological interferences.The pairing of the Free Exercise Clause alongside the Establishment Clause secures for Americans freedom of religion and freedom from governmental imposition of religion. These freedoms have enabled America to thrive as perhaps the most religiously diverse society in history. There are those, however, who seek not just a place for religion in the public square, but to co-opt the institutions of the government itself to advance their own religious agenda, while denying freedoms to others.
It is the right of individuals, including political and religious leaders to express their beliefs in public settings, but it is not their right to imbue governmental actions, meetings, buildings and other segments of the 'public square' with sectarian religious messages. It is the rights of individuals to adopt religious or scientific explanations for the origins of life, but religious theories should never be taught as science or an alternative to science in public schools. It is the right of members of the military to express religious viewpoints to fellow soldiers, but not to proselytize within the chain of command, or implicitly or explicitly pressure those of differing religious beliefs. It is the right of individuals to seek personal freedoms that may run contrary to religious convictions, but the laws of this nation and the pluralistic spirit which they foster demand no single religious belief or view be championed or codified above other sincerely held beliefs.
The JCPA is the umbrella group for 13 national Jewish groups and local community relations councils from around the country.
How Various Religions Fare In Court Challenges
First, those religious groupings that both today and historically have been regarded as outsiders or minorities, such as Jews, Muslims, Native Americans, and various others (including Jehovah’s Witnesses and Christian Scientists), did not succeed or fail in making religious liberty claims at a rate (controlling for all other variables) that was significantly different than for other religious classifications. In sum, with the potential exception of Muslim claimants in certain claim subcategories, religious minorities did not experience disproportionately unfavorable treatments in the federal courts of the 1980s and 1990s.
Second, two categories of religious affiliation by claimants emerged as consistently and significantly associated with a negative outcome—Catholic (at the 99% probability level) and Baptist (at the 95% probability level).
The question remains why those whose religious views are within the mainstream of American society would be significantly less likely to succeed in obtaining a court-ordered accommodation of religious practices. I’ll examine several possible answers to that question, beginning tomorrow.
U.S. To Oppose Current Version of UN Human Rights Council
Monday, February 27, 2006
International Court Hearing Begins On Genocide Charges Against Serbia
US Agency Says Iran Is Increasing Repression of Religious Minorities
Crosses Along Highways Are Proliferating, Professor Says
Sunday, February 26, 2006
9th Circuit Permits Sikh Prisoner's Claim To Go Forward
2006 Christmas In Schools Controversies Begin
Saturday, February 25, 2006
Utah Judge Removed By State Supreme Court For Polygamy
IRS Report On Improper Non-Profit Political Activity
Today's New York Times also covers the report and Commr. Everson's speech about it yesterday in Cleveland. The full text of the report and materials released along with it are online. Here is a summary of the alleged and determined violations from the Executive Summary:
[Thanks to Blog From the Capital for the lead.]
- Charities, including churches, distributing diverse printed materials that encouraged their members to vote for a preferred candidate (24 alleged; 9 determined)
- Religious leaders using the pulpit to endorse or oppose a particular candidate (19 alleged; 12 determined)
- Charities, including churches, criticizing or supporting a candidate on their website or through links to another website (15 alleged; 7 determined)
- Charities, including churches, disseminating improper voter guides or candidate ratings (14 alleged; 4 determined)
- Charities, including churches, placing signs on their property that show they support a particular candidate (12 alleged; 9 determined)
- Charities, including churches, giving improperly preferential treatment to certain candidates by permitting them to speak at functions (11 alleged; 9 determined), and
- Charities, including churches, making cash contributions to a candidateÂs political campaign (7 alleged; 5 determined).
Recent Publications On Church-State Issues
Robert W. Gurry, The Jury Is Out: The Urgent Need For A New Approach In Deciding When Religion-Based Peremptory Strikes Violate the First and Fourteenth Amendments, 18 Regent Univ. Law Review 91-128 (2005-2006).
Symposium: Bankruptcy in the Religious Non-Profit Context, 29 Seton Hall Legislative Journal 341-557 (2005):
- Boozang, Kathleen M., Introduction - Bankruptcy In the Religious Non-Profit Context.
- Skeel, David A., Jr., "Sovereignty" Issues and the Church Bankruptcy Cases.
- Cafardi, Nicholas P., The Availability of Parish Assets for Diocesan Debts: A Canonical Analysis.
- Wells, Catharine Pierce, Who Owns the Local Church? A Pressing Issue For Dioceses In Bankruptcy.
- DiPietro, Melanie, The Relevance of Canon Law In a Bankruptcy Proceeding.
- Sargent, Mark A., The Diocese After Chapter 11.
- Carmella, Angela C., Constitutional Arguments In Church Bankruptcies: Why Judicial Discourse About Religion Matters.
- Brody, Evelyn, The Charity In Bankruptcy and Ghosts of Donors Past, Present, and Future.
- Davitt, Christina M., Student Article: Whose Steeple Is It? Defining the Limits of the Debtor's Estate In the Religious Bankruptcy Context.
Jury Award For Denying Religious Burial To Stillborn Fetus Upheld
Prisoner Free Exercise Decisions Newly Released
In Young v. Medden, (ED Pa., Feb. 23, 2006), a wide-ranging lawsuit against prison officials, a Pennsylvania federal district court permitted a prisoner to proceed with various claims alleging violation of his free exercise rights and of RLUIPA. Willie Young, a believer in African Traditional Spirituality claimed that officials at two different prisons interfered with his ability to practice his religion.
In McElyea v. Schriro, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6765 (D. Ariz., Feb. 13, 2006), an Arizona federal district court judge dismissed a Jewish prisoner's religious exercise claims, finding that the prisoner's "multiple frivolous motions and filings are malicious and vexatious and based on complaints which are designed to harass and antagonize the Defendants". His complaints centered primarily on his ability to observe certain rules regarding the Sabbath and kosher food, and on his objection to the prison's permitting persons to attend Jewish services who are not Jewish according to Orthodox Jewish religious law.
Friday, February 24, 2006
Conservative Ohio Board Member Defends Removing Intelligent Design
I believe in God the creator. I believe in freedom. I believe in America, and the state of Ohio, and the Republican Party, fiscal conservatism, fairness and honesty. These values guided me last week to lead the Ohio Board of Education to remove creationism from our state's Science Standards and Model Curriculum.
You may ask: Why would being a creationist make me want to remove "critical analysis"/"intelligent design" creationism from the standards? It's simple, really: It is deeply unfair to the children of this state to mislead them about the nature of science. The future of Ohio's prosperity depends on a well-educated workforce that understands science. The future of religious freedom in this country depends on the electorate understanding that modern science is not a threat to faith....Our board had to decide whether to waste millions of taxpayer dollars to hear a federal judge tell them the same thing Judge Jones told the Dover, Pa., board. We chose to stand up for kids, for the state of Ohio, for freedom of religion, and for the integrity of science. The public trusts us to uphold first-class standards and to protect democracy and religious freedom. So, we set aside our differences and did the right thing for Ohio and Ohio's children.