Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Australian Court Strikes Down Youth Day Protest Limits As Visitors Are Welcomed With Condoms
UPDATE: Australian Business (July 18) reports extensively on the court hearing leading to the invalidation of the NSW World Youth Day 2008 Regulation. Apparently the court's holding was a statutory one-- that the regulation exceeded the authority granted by the World Youth Day Act, using the presumption that parliament did not intend to authorize rules that would interfere with the exercise of fundamental free free speech rights.
Monday, July 14, 2008
Closed Church Can Challenge Lifting of Property Tax Exemption
In Wisconsin, Increasing Citations ofAmish For Regulatory Violations
Spanish Police Apologize To Sikh For Airport Treatment
Recently Scholarly Articles of Interest
- Keith N. Hylton, Yulia Rodionova, & Fei Deng, Church and State: An Economic Analysis (July 7, 2008).
- Manisuli Ssenyonjo, The Islamic Veil and Freedom of Religion, the Rights to Education and Work: A Survey of Recent International and National Cases (Chinese Journal of International Law, Vol. 6, Issue 3, pp. 653-710, Nov. 2007).
- Meghaan McElroy, Possession is Nine Tenths of the Law: But Who Really Owns a Church's Property in the Wake of a Religious Split within a Hierarchical Church? (William & Mary Law Review, Vol. 50, 2008).
From Bepress:
- Chaim Saiman, Public Law, Private Law, and Legal Science, (Villanova University Legal Working Paper Series, No. 121, July 2008).
From SmartCILP and elsewhere:
- Richard J. Ross, The Career of Puritan Jurisprudence, 26 Law & History Review 227-258 (2008).
- Mark Strasser, Death By a Thousand Cuts: The Illusory Safeguards Against Funding Pervasively Sectarian Institutions of Higher Learning, [Abstract], 56 Buffalo Law Review 353-408 (2008).
- Adrien Katherine Wing, Twenty-First-Century Loving: Nationality, Gender, and Religion in the Muslim World, 76 Fordham Law Review 2895-2905 (2008).
- Thomas C. Berg, Ministers, Minimum Wages, and Church Autonomy, 9 Engage 135-39 (June 2008).
- Carl H. Esbeck, The Application of RFRA to Override Employment Non-Discrimination Clauses Embedded in Federal Social Service Programs, 9 Engage 140-44 (June 2008).
- Raymond Tittman, Homeschooling Battle in California, 9 Engage 145-47 (June 2008).
Sunday, July 13, 2008
Ohio Charter School Plans Carefully To Remain Secular
More Details On Last Year's New Jersey School Proselytization Case Revealed
Today's Worcester (MA) Telegram reports new details on the incident as Matthew spoke at the annual summer outing of the Greater Worcester Humanists. He told of a tense meeting with the school principal, the teacher and the head of the school's history department which LaClairs parents were not allowed to attend. The teacher denied charges and said many of Matthew's quotes took what he said out of context. Paszkiewicz also said he needed his teaching job because he had four children, one of whom had kindey disease. According to LaClair: "It was almost like he was saying that I’d be killing the kid, if I continued to push forward with my complaint."
Court Rejects Free Exercise Claims of 9-11 Families Seeking Move of Sifted Debris
Tibetan Monastary Still Surrounded By Chinese Troops
US Policy Generally Precludes Immigration Raids On Churches
Saturday, July 12, 2008
California Home School Case May Now Be Moot
Ruling on Release of Secret Service Records Found Not Yet Appealable
"Mahr" Held Not A Valid Pre-Nuptial Agreement
France Denies Muslim Woman Citizenship Because of Her Non-French Values
Mention of Satanism Held Not Enough To Reverse Priest's Murder Conviction
Friday, July 11, 2008
Court Rejects Amish Free Exercise Challenge to Buggy Emblem Requirement
UPDATE: AP reports on July 12 that the ACLU will defend another group of similar charges against Amish men in Mayfield.
Israeli Prison Rabbis Report Successes In Obtaining "Gets" For Wives
British Registrar Wins Right To Refuse To Perform Civil Partnership Ceremonies
UPDATE: Here is the full text of the employment tribunal's decision in Ladele v. London Borough of Islingon. [Thanks to the Christian Institute for posting it and to the Anonymous comment to this post for the lead.]
UPDATE: The National Secular Society reported on July 18 that the Islington Council plans to appeal the employment tribunal ruling.
Alleged Biased Remarks By Clinic Director Are Part of Lawsuit
7th Circuit Holds Condo Mezuzah Ban Does Not Violate Fair Housing Act
Judge Wood dissenting said that plaintiffs are claiming religious discrimination, and that a reasonable interpretation of the facts is that the rule was not neutral. Instead its purpose was to discriminate against Jewish condo owners. She argues that a ban on mezuzot amounts to a constructive eviction for observant Jewish residents. In her view, the Fair Housing Act's ban on discrimination in the sale or rental of residential housing is not restricted to activities prior to sale. Yesterday's New York Sun reports on the decision. (See prior related posting.)
As discussed in the court's opinion, now both the city of Chicago and the state of Illinois have legal provisions assuring condo owners the right to place religious symbols on doors. [Thanks to Nicole Neroulias for the lead.]
Legal Maneuvers Ahead of Realignment Vote By Pittsburgh Episcopal Diocese
In its lawsuit, Calvary (in 2005) obtained a court order prohibiting the diocese from transferring any property to any entity outside the Episcopal Church. So this April, Duncan formed a new Pennsylvania corporation named the Episcopal Diocese of Pittsburgh, apparently intending to have it take custody of diocese assets if the realignment is approved. (Episcopal News Service, July 11). In response, Calvary has filed a petition with the court asking it to appoint a monitor to assure that its 2005 order is being complied with, or alternatively, giving Calvary's attorney access to the financial books and records of the diocese. Meanwhile, Progressive Episcopalians of Pittsburgh, a group opposing Duncan's moves, has issued a document titled Frequently Asked Questions About Realignment.
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Obama Campaign's Religious Affairs Director Profiled
Minority Religions Face Burial Problems In Kyrgyzstan
Poll Contrasts Views On Sharia In Iran, Egypt, Turkey
In Iran, a majority of residents tell Gallup that Sharia must be a source of legislation, but not the only source. In Turkey, poll findings show how divided the Turkish public is about the role of Sharia in legislation. In Egypt, however, public opinion is much more likely to favor religious law as the only source of legislation....
[M]en and women express strikingly similar views within each country on the role of Sharia in legislation.... Overall, older respondents are more likely than younger ones to say Sharia must be the only source of legislation (although this pattern is weaker in Turkey than in Iran and Egypt).... In Turkey and Iran, those who have a secondary level of education are less likely than those with a primary level of education or less to say Sharia must be the only source of legislation. There is no difference by education level in Egypt.
3rd Circuit Finds Prison Music Policy Does Not Violate Establishment Clause
Michigan Church Wins Zoning Challenge In Settlement
Wednesday, July 09, 2008
India, Under Christian Pressure, Blocks Migration of Bene Menashe To Israel
Defense Department Moves To Dismiss Suit Claiming Religious Discrimination
Lawsuit Challenges Publishers' Translation of Bible Verse
UPDATE: Bill Poser on Language Log has an excellent discussion of the translation issues posed by the original Greek in the Biblical verse at issue.
Gaer Elected New Chair of USCIRF
Muslim Woman Sues For Employment Discrimination
Hungary's Constitutional Court Strikes Down Hate Speech Amendments
Swiss Referendum on Banning Minaret Construction Will Be Held
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
Police Require Orthodox Jewish Woman To Remove Wig For Arrest Photo
Folk Religions Get Very Different Treatments Around the World
Meanwhile Lifesite News yesterday reported on a case decided in May by a criminal court judge in the Brazilian state of Bahia. Judge Ricardo Augusto Schmitt ordered confiscation from bookstores of all copies of a book condemning witchcraft written by Catholic priest Jonas Abib. The book is titled "Yes, Yes! No, No! Reflections on Healing and Liberation." In obtaining the court order, the public prosecutor argued that Bahia's state constitution requires the state "to preserve and guarantee the integrity, respectability, and permanence of the values of Afro-Brazilian religion." He accused accused Abib of "making false and prejudiced statements" about spiritualist religions and inciting disrespect for their objects of worship.
Christian Group Runs Controversial Ad Against New Colorado Law
Court Dismisses Free Exercise Challenge To Forest Service Permit Regulations
Ahmadis Zoning Denial Leads To Suit Against Maryland Town
Monday, July 07, 2008
Israeli Court-Approved Compromise On Autopsies May Be Solution To Future Cases
Church Sues To Challenge Zoning Denial
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Campbell v. Cornell Corrections of Rhode Island, Inc., 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49191 (D RI, June 27, 2008), a Rastafarian prisoner sued because he was denied a vegetarian diet as required by his religious beliefs. The court held that at this stage of the litigation, there is such a lack of evidence on plaintiff's First Amendment claim that neither party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The court rejected plaintiff's Eighth Amendment claim.
In Ransom v. Johnson, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49378 (ED CA, June 18, 2008), a California federal magistrate judge recommended that a Muslim prisoner's motion for summary judgment be denied on his First Amendment claim that he was not permitted to attend communal prayer while in "C-status"-- designed to limit the movements inmates who were unwilling to comply with prison rules.
In Contreraz v. Adams, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49150 (ED CA, June 11, 2008), a California federal magistrate judge dismissed, with leave to amend, a complaint filed by a Native American prisoner who was a member of the "Olin Pyramid" religion. Plaintiff claimed he had been denied religious dietary modifications and an exemption from the grooming standards. However his 323-page complaint violated pleading rules and failed to link any specific defendant with a specific constitutional violation.
EC Adopts Anti-Discrimination Directive
the Commission adopted a proposal for a directive which provides for protection from discrimination on grounds of age, disability, sexual orientation and religion or belief beyond the workplace. This new directive would ensure equal treatment in the areas of social protection, including social security and health care, education and access to and supply of goods and services which are commercially available to the public, including housing....
The law will prohibit direct and indirect discrimination as well as harassment and victimisation.... The directive will only apply to private persons in so far as they are performing their commercial activities or professional. Also, Member States will remain free to maintain measures ensuring the secular nature of the State or concerning the status and activities of religious organisations.
New Scholarly Articles and Books of Interest Abound
- Ayelet Shachar, Privatizing Diversity: A Cautionary Tale from Religious Arbitration in Family Law, (June 25, 2008, Theoretical Inquiries in Law, Vol. 9, No. 2, pp. 573-607, 2008).
- Katja Rost, Emil Inauen, Margit Osterloh & Bruno S. Frey, The Corporate Governance of Benedictine Abbeys: What Can Stock Corporations Learn from Monasteries?, (May 25, 2008).
- Frederick Mark Gedicks, Fundamentalism, Spirituality, and Church-State Relations in the United States. Chapter in Multiculturalisms: Different Meanings and Perspectives of Multiculturalism in a Global World (Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, Barbara Pozzo ed. forthcoming 2008).
- John M. Bickers, Of Non-Horses, Quantum Mechanics, and the Establishment Clause" (forthcoming 57 Kansas Law Review (2009)).
- Vincent Phillip Munoz, The Original Meaning of the Free Exercise Clause: The Evidence from the First Congress" Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, Vol. 31, No. 3, pp. 1083-1120 (2008).
- Lisa Shaw Roy, History, Transparency, and the Establishment Clause: A Proposal for Reform, 112 Penn State Law Review 683-729 (2008).
- John Witte, Jr., "Fairer Still the Woodlands" --Mapping the Free Exercise Forest, (Reviewing Kent Greenawalt, Religion and the Constitution: Free Exercise and Fairness.) 24 Constitutional Commentary 551-565 (2007).
- The Wren Cross Controversy: Religion and the Public University. Essays by Erwin Chemerinsky and Gerard V. Bradley. 49 William & Mary Law Review 2193-2263 (2008): Chemerinsky, Why Church and State Should Be Separate; Bradley, Religion at a Public University.
- Frank S. Ravitch, Intelligent Design in Public University Science Departments: Academic Freedom or Establishment of Religion, 16 William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal 1061-1090 (2008).
- Thomas L. Shaffer, Business Lawyers, Baseball Players, and the Hebrew Prophets, 42 Valparaiso University Law Review 1063-1080 (2008).
- Nicholas A. Schuneman, One Nation, Under ...The Watchmaker?: Intelligent Design and the Establishment Clause, 22 BYU Journal of Public Law 179-227 (2007).
- Jeffrey Shulman, What Yoder Wrought: Religious Disparagement, Parental Alienation and the Best Interests of the Child, 53 Villanova Law Review 173-208 (2008).
- William Joseph Wagner, To the Age of Social Revolution: As Papal Rejoiner, "The Apocalypse Is Not Now", 53 Villanova Law Review 209-271 (2008).
- The Center for American Progress has published in full online a collection of essays titled Debating the Divine: Religion in 21st Century American Democracy. Links to individual essays are on the Center's web page devoted to the book. [Thanks to Melissa Rogers for the lead.]
- Mark Silk & Andrew Walsh, One Nation, Divisible: How Regional Religious Differences Shape American Politics, (Rowman & Littlefield, June 2008). [Thanks to Spiritual Politics for the lead.]
Sunday, July 06, 2008
Bush, Fukuda Will Both Attend Olympics Opening Despite Human Rights Concerns
Q ... I was wondering if you could ... explain ... your decision to attend the Opening Ceremonies of the Olympics next month. And more generally, I'm wondering what you would say to ... your friends and allies in the United States who are very concerned about religious freedom and human rights in China....
PRESIDENT BUSH: I view the Olympics as a opportunity for me to cheer on our athletes.... [E]very time I have visited with [the Chinese] ... I have talked about religious freedom and human rights. And so ... I don't need the Olympics to express my concerns. I've been doing so.... [N]ot going to the opening games would be ... an affront to the Chinese people, which may make it more difficult to ... speak frankly with the Chinese leadership.... I think it would be good for these athletes who have worked hard to see their President waving that flag....
... I have been very clear in my view that, for example, a whole society is one that honors religion, and that people shouldn't fear religious people.... China benefits from people being able to worship freely. It looks like there's some progress, at least in the talks with the Dalai Lama....
PRIME MINISTER FUKUDA: ... [H]ere for the first time, I will announce that I -- announce officially that I will attend the Opening Ceremony of the Olympics.... I don't think you really have to link Olympics to politics.... In the past ... the U.S. and others criticized Japan for certain behaviors.... So we really have to ... have humility in asking ourselves, do we have the right to make those points to China and others.... We are neighbors, after all, and it will good for Japan if our neighbors are in a sound state, as well. So with that in mind, as well, I shall attend the Opening Ceremony.
Historian Says Links Between Democrats and Evangelicals Have Deep Roots
Maybe the distance between liberals and evangelicals, each eternal optimists in their way, is much smaller than we realized. In our week of national reflection, it’s worth recognizing that religious enthusiasm in America has as often as not had a reformist or even revolutionary cast to it....
We often forget how close the revolutionaries were to the Great Awakening of the 1730s and ’40s, when revival meetings were held across the colonies and apocalyptic expectation hung heavy in the air....
For most of American history, evangelicals were Democrats or their equivalents, profoundly uncomfortable near the temple of the moneychangers. Jefferson attracted huge numbers of voters simply because his running mate, Aaron Burr, was the grandson of the great evangelist Jonathan Edwards.
Canadian Human Rights Commission Dismisses Charges Against Catholic Magazine
Civil-Religious Courts Clash Again In Indonesia
UPDATE: On July 7, High Court judge Datuk Balia Yusuf Wahi rejected the family's request for an injunction and Elangesvaran's body was buried according to Muslim tradition by the Parit Buntar state religious council. Nevertheless, according to the New Straits Times, the family has filed a notice of appeal in the case.
Court Upholds Restraining Order Against Autistic Teen At Services
Friday, July 04, 2008
Alaska Court Upholds Tax Exemption For Church-Owned Teacher Housing
Press Groups Support En Banc Reivew In Eagle Case
Town Tries To Stop Catholic Radio Station After It Ends Ecumenical Programs
Rev. John Gatzak, spokesman for the archdiocese, says that the Festival of Faith programming was not of high quality, and that the archdiocese has a responsibility to use its station for Catholic evangelizing. However, Gatzak has met with Protestant and Orthodox producers from "Festival of Faith" and agreed to discuss alternative ecumenical programs. [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]
British Court Says Jewish School Can Admit Students On Basis of Religion
As will become apparent, the religious issue at the heart of this controversy – though not, I emphasise, a matter for determination by me – is the answer to the question, Who is a Jew? And, as will also become apparent, that is not a matter on which all those who conscientiously believe themselves to be Jews agree.The main contention in the case by plaintiff was that JFS had engaged in racial discrimination in violation of the Race Relations Act 1976 since the determination of Jewishness was not based on belief or religious practice, but on ancestry. The court concluded, however, that
what one has here ... is at most discrimination on religious grounds between one part and another part of what the law recognises as a racial (ethnic) group, but ... not race discrimination.... [A] a policy which permitted preferences only on the basis of religious practice would prejudice religions, such as Judaism, which define membership exclusively by status and not by practice or observance.Times Online reports on the decision. (See prior related posting.)
State Petitions To Get Medical Treatment For Amish Child
On a related issue, yesterday Religion News Service published an interview with Shawn Francis Peters, author of the book, When Prayer Fails: Faith Healing, Children and the Law. Asked to explain the theology behind various denominations' choice of prayer over medicine, Peters cited James 5:14 which reads: "Is any among you sick? Let him call for the elders of the assembly, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord, and the prayer of faith will heal him who is sick, and the Lord will raise him up."
British Judge Says Sharia As Part of Arbitration Is OK
Social Conservatives Adopt Declaration of American Values
Belgian Court Says Patka Ban Violates Human Rights Convention
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Santeria Adherent Fined For Animal Cruelty
9th Circuit Says California Law Does Not Ban Anti-Abortion Display Near Schools
In a press release reacting to the decision, the Center for Bio-Ethical Reform said: "We are grateful to God for granting the Founding Fathers the wisdom to create appellate courts which can rectify the mistakes of trial court judges.... The First Amendment means nothing if it doesn't mean the right to show people things they don't want to see."
2nd Circuit Rejects Capital Defendant's Challenge To Evidence About His Religious Beliefs
LAPD Officer Sues Department Claiming Religious Discrimination
Some Oppose Obama's Limit On Faith-Based Hiring In Funded Programs
Get Religion yesterday focused on the same concerns. It quotes an example from the blog Spiritual Politics : "You can certainly imagine situations where ... a relatively small church wants to hire a youth pastor but can only afford one half time, so wants to be able to make that a full-time position ... by making him head of the publicly funded after-school program. That’s not allowed (unless, of course, you open the youth pastor position to people of any religious persuasion). "
UPDATE: The July 5 New York Times surveys the debate over religious-based hiring by religiously affiliated social service providers receiving federal funds. It says that Obama's position implicates "deeper questions about religious freedom that could very well seal the fate not only of any new and potentially improved partnerships between government and religious groups but also even those partnerships that, in reality, had been operating for decades."
Proposed Iranian Law Would Treat Blogs That Promote Apostasy As Capital Offense
Former Texas Science Curriculum Director Sues Over Agency Policy On Creationism
The complaint asserts that Comer's constitutional rights were violated when she was fired for violating TEA's unconstitutional policy, and that she was also denied due process when TEA operating procedures were not followed in her dismissal.By professing "neutrality," the Agency unconstitutionally credits creationism, a religious belief, as a valid scientific theory. The Agency's policy is not neutral at all, because it has the purpose or effect of inviting dispute about whether to teach creationism as science in public schools.... The Agency's "neutrality" policy violates the Establishment Clause ... because it has the purpose or effect of endorsing religion.
EEOC Sues On Behalf of Sikh Job Applicant
Wednesday, July 02, 2008
Court Upholds Ban on 12-Foot High Cross In 4th of July Celebration
Appeal Filed In Photographer's Sexual Orientation Discrimination Case
Florida RFRA Challenge To Park Feeding Ordinance Dismissed
Florida's School Zone Safety Law Held Vague In Suit By Gideons Member
Church Required To Identify Some Members In RLUIPA Interrogatories
The court held that while the church made a prima facie showing of infringement of its rights, the town had demonstrated a compelling need for the information in order to investigate the Church's claims. However, the court concluded that a narrower order would provide the town with relevant information. It ordered the Church merely to identify all members who have attended Church programming where they have had to stand, or have been denied admission, because of inadequate space, and members who have had to reschedule personal events because of space limitations. In addition, this information was placed under a protective order and was to be disclosed only to defendant's attorney. Finally any questioning of Church members whose names are furnished must be limited to factual questions about numbers of people in attendance, and may not involve inquiry into members' religious beliefs.
Court Rejects Ministerial Exception Defense In Firing of Pregnant Teacher
The court rejected defendant's "ministerial exception" defense, holding that "while certain statements in Cote can be read to foreclose a ministerial employee from ever being able to challenge his employer's stated religious motive for a discharge..., nothing in that decision ... supports extending a similarly absolute prohibition to secular employees such as plaintiff." The court went on to hold that an inquiry into the school's motivation in this cased would not violate the Establishment Clause because it could be made without calling into question the validity or truthfulness of religious doctrine. The decision reaffirmed the court's 2006 holding in the case, which it had agreed to reconsider in light of the recent 2nd Circuit decision.
NY High Court Rejects Attempt To Require Election At Hindu Temple
Tuesday, July 01, 2008
Obama To Support Expansion of Faith-Based Initiative
UPDATE: The original AP report was inaccurate in saying that Obama will support religious-based hiring. In the full text of his remarks, Obama says just the opposite:
Now, make no mistake, as someone who used to teach constitutional law, I believe deeply in the separation of church and state, but I don’t believe this partnership will endanger that idea – so long as we follow a few basic principles. First, if you get a federal grant, you can’t use that grant money to proselytize to the people you help and you can’t discriminate against them – or against the people you hire – on the basis of their religion. Second, federal dollars that go directly to churches, temples, and mosques can only be used on secular programs. And we’ll also ensure that taxpayer dollars only go to those programs that actually work.Salon provides further coverage. [Thanks to Blog from the Capital for the lead.]
Russian Musem Officials Being Prosecuted For Religiously Offensive Art Show
Australian State Imposes Rules For World Youth Day Conduct
Report Supports British Faith Schools
Odone's report has been attacked by the British Humanist Association and by Ekklesia. (Ekklesia release.)Faith schools have been wrongly attacked for the wrong reasons. Political positioning has led the Minister of Education to denounce these schools. In so doing, he was stoking and validating a smear campaign, orchestrated by a strident secularist lobby, that has long plagued this sector....
The schools do not cream-skim pupils. The intake of Christian schools reflects a broader ethnic range than comprehensive schools in the same area. Faith schools do not turn away children in care..... The schools are not divisive.... Faith schools are not misogynist. Girls who attend Muslim schools are more than twice as likely to go on to higher education than those who attend secular state or independent
schools.Faith schools do not charge parents for places.... The schools do not create a ghetto mentality.... Faith schools do not teach Creationism in science classes.... Faith schools have an excellent academic record, serve their local communities, and ground their students in a religious as well as the national identity....
[F]or low-income parents, these schools represent the only way their children can be taught the faith that their own family holds dear....For Muslims in particular, faith schools offer a bridge between their religious community and the wider secular society. For Muslim girls, they are the route out of a forced marriage, or their parents’ kitchen, and into higher education.... Quite simply, we need more, not fewer, faith schools.