Although the Church’s present predicament results from design choices it agreed to, albeit reluctantly, those choices were made in the hope of achieving breakthrough architecture. To force this congregation to live with, and almost certainly die as a result of the failure of its experiment would dissuade others from choosing the novel over the mundane.However the decision conditioned granting of the permit on the Church's maintaining its downtown presence in a new building. It is not clear whether this ruling moots a pending federal court action challenging the historic landmark designation originally imposed on the Church. (See prior posting.)
Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
DC Church Gets Demolition Permit Despite Its Historic Landmark Status
Canadian Parents Seek Funding For Blind, Deaf, Learning Disabled In Faith Schools
West Virginia Mother Sues Over School Immunization Requirements
UPDATE: The May 18 West Virginia Record reports that the judge in the case has entered a temporary restraining order permitting the girl to attend school until the end of this school year while the case is pending. However, under the terms of the order, the school can remove the girl if cases of any disease preventable by vaccination break out at the school.
NY Assembly Passes Same-Sex Marriage Bill; Fate In Senate Unclear
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
President Declares May As Jewish American Heritage Month
National Mock Trial Championship Places Asterisks On Standings of Rescheduled Teams; [UPDATE: Then Are Removed]
UPDATE: A commenter points out that as of May 14, the asterisks beside the rankings of the Massachusetts and Maine teams has been removed.
US Elected To Seat On UN Human Rights Council
IRS Says Foundation Did Not Violate Non-Profit Rules
UPDATE: The full text of the IRS letter to the Niemoller Foundation is available from BNA Daily Report for Executives (subscription required).
Pope's Middle East Visit Continues To Be Politically Delicate
USCIRF Creates New Fellowship Program
EU Official Says Lisbon Treaty Will Ensure Consultation With Religious Groups
Paper Explores Attempt To Organize A Good News Club
If the legal juggernaut of militant Evangelism makes the prospect of opposing the Good News Club daunting, the personal politics can be even more troubling for concerned parents. "I earn a living from my business in this community, and there are a lot of religious people here," said the Wisconsin father who objects to the club's activities in his school. "But I know that if I were to go public with my objections, I'd lose a lot of clients and my kids would get targeted." A California mother added: "My kids are going to be in this school system for many years. I don’t want them getting blowback from their peers. And I don’t want them to be discriminated against by their teachers." Another parent in New York said, "As a member of a religious minority, there is an additional sense of burden. You feel like your behavior is being scrutinized, you are worried about stereotyping. So you don’t speak up."In a surprise ending, the effort at Cold Spring failed when no children showed up for the first Good News Club meeting. [Thanks to both Patrick O'Donnell and Katherine Stewart for the lead.]
Mexican State Amends Constitution To Define "Person" As Including Fetus
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Pope In Israel Finds Himself In Midst of Controversy
The chairman of the Yad Vashem Directorate, Avner Shalev, said he expected the pope, "who is a human being, too," to draw on his personal experience to issue a stronger condemnation of Nazis and Germans, who were not directly mentioned in the speech. The pope grew up in Nazi Germany and served in both Hitler Youth and the Wehrmacht, before deserting from the army in 1944. Shalev, however, said the speech was "important," especially in its criticism of denial of the Holocaust....
The chairman of Yad Vashem, Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau, himself a Holocaust survivor, complained of the pope's usage of the word "millions" instead of the more specific "6 million" when speaking of the Holocaust's Jewish victims, as well as over his use of the word "killed" rather than "murdered."
The Pope's remarks included a plea that Holocaust victims' suffering "never be denied, belittled or forgotten!" Sky News points out the importance of this statement, since in recent months the Pope has been strongly criticized for lifting the excommunication of Holocaust-denying Lefebvrite Bishop Richard Williamson. (See prior posting.)
Later in the day, the Pope spoke to leaders of interreligious dialogue efforts in a meeting at the Notre Dame Center in Jerusalem. (Full text of remarks.) At the end of the meeting, Sheikh Taysir al-Tamimi, the head of the Sharia religious courts in the West Bank and Gaza, delivered an unscheduled speech, lashing out at Israeli policy and insisting that Jerusalem was "the eternal political, national and spiritual capital of Palestine." Haaretz and the Financial Times report that the speech, delivered in Arabic, did not have simultaneous translation. The conference, as scheduled, broke up immediately after al-Tamimi's speech, and the Pope, when informed of the nature of al-Tamimi's remarks, left the conference hall with his entourage.Appeal To DC Circuit Filed In Case Upholding Part of National Park Speech Permit Regs
Oklahoma House Resolution Opposes U.N. Convention on Rights of the Child
Zoning Challenge Filed By Illinois Jewish Day School
BBC Appoints Muslim As Head of Religious Programming
Quebec Court Awards Damages To Raelians For Invasion of Privacy By Press
Rael, born in France, believes he is the result of the union between an Eloha, a member of an extra-terrestrial family, the Elohim, and a woman from Earth, and that after having received the good message from these which manifested themselves to him early in his adult life, he gave himself the mission to prepare the Elohim’s return on Earth and to create favourable conditions for humans of the Earth for them to give us eternal life.The Raelian movement issued its own press release on the decision.
Monday, May 11, 2009
Privy Council Holds Trinidad & Tobago's Trinity Cross Unconstitutional
The decision reverses a 2007 judgement of the Trinidad and Tobago Court of Appeal holding that while the country's Trinity Cross award may be discriminatory against non-Christians, it was issued under letters patent that predate the current Constitution. Under Section 6 of the Constitution, pre-existing laws are not subject to attack for violating the Constitution's Declaration of Rights and Freedoms. (See prior posting.) The Privy Council concluded that the Letters Patent issued by the Crown is not the type of enactment or law that is protected against scrutiny under Trinidad and Tobago's Constitution. However the Privy Council also held that its judgment does not retroactively invalidate past awards of the Trinity Cross. Lord Mance issued a concurring judgment offering an alternative rationale for finding the award unconstitutional.
The Privy Council agreed to decide the case even though in 2008 Trinidad and Tobago changed the name of the award to The Order of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, changed the name of Order of the Trinity to The Distinguished Society of Trinidad and Tobago, and replaced the Cross with a Medal. Friday's London Times reported on the Privy Council decision.
Indiana Atheist Group Sues Over Rejection of Bus Ad
Yemen Begins Study of Religious School Curriculum; Plans Mosque Database
British Sikhs On Police Force Want Bulletproof Turbans
Malaysia Looks To Expand Its Islamic Finance Industry
Recent Articles and Books of Interest
- Richard W. Garnett, Judicial Enforcement of the Establishment Clause, (Constitutional Commentary, Forthcoming).
- Abner Greene, Three Theories of Religious Equality...and of Exemptions, (Texas Law Review, Vol. 87, No. 963, 2009).
- Simon Butt, Polygamy and Mixed Marriage in Indonesia: Islam and the Marriage Law in the Courts, (in Indonesia: Law and Society, T. Lindsey, ed., Federation Press, 2008).
- Thomas Charles Berg, Religious-School Financing and Educational Pluralism in the American Tradition, (Rivista Antonianum, 2009).
- Gregory A. Kalscheur, Conscience and Citizenship: The Primacy of Conscience for Catholics in Public Life, (Journal of Catholic Social Thought, Vol. 6, No. 2, Summer 2009).
- Jessica Knouse, From Identity Politics to Ideology Politics, (Utah Law Review, Forthcoming).
- Michael Kent Curtis, Be Careful What You Wish For: Gays, Dueling High School T-Shirts, and the Perils of Suppression, (Wake Forest Law Review, Forthcoming).
- Nelson Tebbe, Excluding Religion: A Reply, (University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Vol. 157, 2009).
From Bepress:
- Rahma Hersi, A Value Oriented Legal Theory for Muslim Countries in the 21st Century: A Comparative Study of Both Islamic Law and Common Law Systems, (Cornell Law School Graduate Student Papers Series, Paper 29, April 2009).
From SmartCILP:
- Kyle Duncan, Misunderstanding Freedom from Religion: Two Cents on Madison's Three Pence, 9 Nevada Law Journal 32-62 (2008).
- Gene R. Nichol, Establishing Inequality, (Reviewing Martha C. Nussbaum, Liberty of Conscience: In Defense of America's Tradition of Religious Equality.) 107 Michigan Law Review 913-930 (2009).
- Bishop Thomas J.Paprocki, Address. Annual Meeting of the National Diocesan Attorneys Association, As the Pendulum Swings from Charitable Immunity to Bankruptcy, Bringing It to Rest with Charitable Viability, 48 Journal of Catholic Legal Studies 1-18 (2009).
- Joshua Foster, Prophets, Cartoons, and Legal Norms: Rethinking the United Nations Defamation of Religion Provisions, 48 Journal of Catholic Legal Studies 19-57 (2009).
- Harry G. Hutchison, Work, the Social Question, Progress and the Common Good? (Reviewing Recovering Self-Evident Truths: Catholic Perspectives on American Law, edited by Michael A. Scaperlanda and Teresa Stanton Collett), 48 Journal of Catholic Legal Studies 59-116 (2009).
Recent Books:
- Daniel O Conkle, Constitutional Law: The Religion Clauses, Second Edition, (Foundation Press, 2009), excerpts on SSRN.
- Steven P. Miller, Billy Graham and the Rise of the Republican South, (Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, March 2009), reviewed in the New York Times.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
Paper Questions Governmental Structure of Ave Maria, Florida
In Kuwait, Islamists Challenge Women Candidates For Parliament
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Dawson v. Burnette, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37729 (WD MI, May 4, 2009), a Michigan federal district judge adopted a magistrate's recommendations that a Buddhist prisoner be permitted to proceed with his 1st Amendment damage claim alleging that he was denied a vegan diet, but that his claims under RLUIPA be dismissed and his claims for declaratory and injunctive relief be dismissed as moot.
In Mitchell v. Hamlet, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37567 (ND CA, April 15, 2009), in a screening hearing, the court permitted plaintiff to proceed with his claims that he was denied a Halal diet, the ability to wear a beard, the ability to group-worship, the ability to use earned time to attend prayer services, and that he was limited to a single vendor in purchasing religious items. He also claims he was limited in the amount of prayer oils that he can order, and that no Muslim chaplain or large prayer rug is available to Muslim inmates.
In Boyd v. McGuire, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38026 (D NJ, May 5, 2009), a New Jersey federal district court permitted a Muslim jail inmate to proceed with his equal protection claim that Muslim prisoners receive only a vegetarian diet, while Jewish prisoners receive a kosher diet that includes meat. The court dismissed his 1st Amendment claim, but with leave to amend and refile. It also dismissed his claim for prospective injunctive relief because he was about to be transferred to a different facility.
In Davis v. Hawaii, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38091 (D HI, May 4, 2009), a Hawaii federal magistrate judge transferred venue to Arizona in a case alleging that a Hawaii prisoner incarcerated in Arizona was prevented him from practicing his Native Hawaiian religion.
Obama Will Address Muslim World From Egypt June 4
Q: ... there are a lot of Muslims who look at the leadership of Egypt warily and consider it to be exactly the problem with leaders in the Muslim world.... Is it not possible that this is a bad selection?
MR. GIBBS: No. I think, as I mentioned earlier, ... in many ways, this is the heart of Arab world. And ... this isn't a speech to leaders. This is a speech to many, many people and a continuing effort by this President and this White House to demonstrate how we can work together to ensure the safety and security and the future well-being, through hope and opportunity, of the children of this country and of the Muslim world....
British Muslim Police Chef Objects To Requirement He Cook Pork
Saturday, May 09, 2009
Pope, In Jordan, Speaks On Manipulation of Religion
Certainly, the contradiction of tensions and divisions between the followers of different religious traditions, sadly, cannot be denied. However, is it not also the case that often it is the ideological manipulation of religion, sometimes for political ends, that is the real catalyst for tension and division, and at times even violence in society? In the face of this situation, where the opponents of religion seek not simply to silence its voice but to replace it with their own, the need for believers to be true to their principles and beliefs is felt all the more keenly. Muslims and Christians, precisely because of the burden of our common history so often marked by misunderstanding, must today strive to be known and recognized as worshippers of God faithful to prayer ... and ever mindful of the common origin and dignity of all human persons...The resolve of Jordanian educators and religious and civic leaders to ensure that the public face of religion reflects its true nature is praiseworthy.
Obama Compromises On End To D.C. School Vouchers
Two Amish Families Held In Contempt Over Sewage Code Compliance
Activists Will File Criminal Complaint Against Pope In Israel
British Court Upholds Ban On Hindu Funeral Pyres
Court Hears Petition To Force Teenager To Have Chemo Over Religious Objections
Friday, May 08, 2009
6th Circuit Defines Test For Religious Accommodation Claim Against Union
In Reed, an employee who had religious objections to union membership was accommodated by allowing him to contribute the full amount of union dues to charity. The employee, however, argued that he should be allowed to contribute to charity $10 per month less-- the smaller amount that equals the agency fee charged by the union in lieu of dues to those who object to the union's political stances. The lead opinion written by Judge Batchelder held that the employee, Jeffrey Reed, had suffered no discipline or adverse employment action other than the accommodation itself. Thus he had not proven a critical element of his claim.
Judge Guy, concurring in the result, concluded that Reed's claim fails because the accommodation offered by the union was reasonable. Judge McKeague, dissenting, argued that Reed had established his prima facie case by showing that he was subjected to adverse employment action. He was required to pay more as a religious objector than he would have had to pay as a secular objector to union membership. Judge McKeague went on to hold that the accommodation offered by the union was unreasonable and discriminatory. [Thanks to Jonathan Adler via Joe Slater for the lead.]
Under Pressure, National Mock Trial Group Agrees To Accommodate Sabbath Needs
This year's competition is being held in Atlanta, hosted by the Georgia State Bar. ADL yesterday said the schedule change came only after Judge Doris Downs, Chief Judge of Fulton County (GA) Superior Courts, said the competition could not use Fulton County courtrooms if all schools could not fully participate. Also, ADL Southeast Regional Board Chair Elizabeth Price tendered her resignation as a member of the Georgia State Bar's board of governors when the Association refused to support accommodation for the Jewish school. Adding even further pressure, according to a release from the Orthodox Union, were questions raised by Georgia Governor Sonny Purdue's office and questions raised by the Civil Rights Division of the US Department of Justice as to whether Georgia State Courts could receive federal grant funds if they discriminated. Today's Fulton County (GA) Record also has coverage of Judge Downs' role in obtaining the changed schedule.
UPDATE: Here is the competition organizers' side of the dispute in a press release from NHSMTC. It says that the Maimonides team had earlier accepted a compromise under wihich it would merely not participate in Saturday rounds. The organizers say they also provided other accommodations involving more hotel space and dietary considerations.
Settlement In Case Challenging NC Park Speech Rule
Oklahoma Legislature Authorizes 10 Commandments At Capitol
The State Capitol Preservation Commission ... is hereby authorized to ... arrange for the placement on the State Capitol grounds of a suitable monument displaying the Ten Commandments. The ... monument shall use the same words used on the monument at issue in Van Orden v. Perry, that the United States Supreme Court ruled constitutional. This monument shall be designed, constructed, and placed on the Capitol grounds by private entities at no expense to the State of Oklahoma....The family of Rep. Mike Ritze, sponsor of the bill, will pay the $10,000 cost of the monument.
In the event that the legality or constitutionality of the Ten Commandments monument is challenged in a court of law, the Oklahoma Attorney General or Liberty Legal Institute is hereby authorized to prepare and present a legal defense of the monument.
The placement of this monument shall not be construed to mean that the State of Oklahoma favors any particular religion or denomination thereof over others, but rather will be placed on the Capitol grounds where there are numerous other monuments.
European Parliament Recommends Directive Protecting Kosher Slaughter
MEPs approve the principle that animals must be slaughtered using only methods that ensure death instantly or after stunning, except in the case of religious ritual, for which they called for the current blanket exemption to be preserved rather than allowing for exemptions to be decided at national level.EJP reports that the proposal now goes for a vote by the EU Council of Ministers, scheduled for next month. Currently kosher slaughtering of animals is banned in Sweden, Norway, Finland, Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania, while Switzerland permits it only for poultry. The European Jewish community is concerned that the impact of the bill could be undercut because a vote is scheduled next month by the Council of Ministers on whether even animals killed in religious rites are required to be stunned before slaughter. Kosher slaughtering does not permit stunning.
Parents Sue For Records of Lesbian Minister's Talk At High School
Thursday, May 07, 2009
President Signs National Day of Prayer Proclamation
Throughout our Nation's history, Americans have come together in moments of great challenge and uncertainty to humble themselves in prayer.... It is in that spirit of unity and reflection that we once again designate the first Thursday in May as the National Day of Prayer.The White House released a photo of the President signing the Proclamation, with Joshua DuBois, Director of the White House Office for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, looking on.
At Tuesday's White House Press Briefing (full text), this exchange between reporters and Press Secretary Robert Gibbs took place:
[See prior related posting.]Q: Robert, can I ask about Thursday? The National Day of Prayer -- the President, as I understand it, is going to sign a proclamation but there's not going to be a public ceremony, as the Bush administration did. Why the difference in approach? Does the President have a different feeling about this event than his predecessor?
MR. GIBBS: No, I mentioned, I think when I was asked about this last week, that prayer is something that the President does every day. I think, given some of the issues that you all have denoted today, it might be a healthy thing. But we're doing a proclamation, which I know that many administrations in the past have done.
Q: The previous administration had a ceremony with prayers and speeches and such. Does he think -- the current President think that that was politicized in some fashion?
MR. GIBBS: No, I'm not going to get into that. Again, I think the President understands, in his own life and in his family's life, the role that prayer plays. And I would denote that administrations prior to the past one did proclamations. That's the way the President will publicly observe National Prayer Day. But as I said, privately he'll pray as he does every day.
Q: Is he going to pray at the church that he calls his own?
MR. GIBBS: I'm sorry --
Q: Will he soon pray in a church that he calls his own?
MR. GIBBS: He may. Amen. (Laughter.)
Controversy Surrounds Today's National Day of Prayer
following the National Day of Prayer Service, members of Congress and leaders of faith-based groups will hold a bipartisan press conference to affirm America's Christian heritage, as outlined in America’s Spiritual Heritage Resolution (H.Res. 397), and to address President Obama's recent statement, made while visiting Turkey, that "we do not consider ourselves a Christian nation or a Jewish nation...."H. Res. 397 is in committee and has not as of this time been voted on by the House. Yesterday's Washington Times quotes several critics of President Obama. Shirley Dobson, chairwoman of the National Day of Prayer Task Force, said: "At this time in our country's history, we would hope our president would recognize more fully the importance of prayer." Wendy Wright, president of Concerned Women for America, added: "For those of us who have our doubts about Obama's faith, no, we did not expect him to have the service. But as president, he should put his own lack of faith aside and live up to the office."
Meanwhile the same Washington Times article reports that neither President Obama nor other top administration officials will attend the 6th annual National Catholic Prayer Breakfast scheduled for Friday. Joe Cella, a spokesman for the Catholic event, said that while the President would have been welcome to attend, he would not have been permitted to speak because of a 2004 statement from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (full text) calling on Catholic groups to avoid honoring politicians who oppose Catholic teachings on human life. At Mirror of Justice blog, Rob Vischer questions whether this was the result the Bishops intended by their 2004 directive. Keynote speaker at the Catholic breakfast will be U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.
Maine Is 5th State To Permit Gay Marriage; New Hampshire Bill Sent To Governor
This Part does not authorize any court or other state or local governmental body, entity, agency or commission to compel, prevent or interfere in any way with any religious institution's religious doctrine, policy, teaching or solemnization of marriage within that particular religious faith's tradition as guaranteed by the Maine Constitution, Article 1, Section 3 or the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. A person authorized to join persons in marriage and who fails or refuses to join persons in marriage is not subject to any fine or other penalty for such failure or refusal.AP reports that opponents of the new law say they will challenge it through a statewide referendum. Seacoast Online says that Rev. Bob Emerich of the Jeremiah Project in Plymouth (ME) will be working with the Portland Catholic diocese and other groups to obtain the 55,087 signatures needed to get a referendum measure on the statewide ballot.
Later yesterday, the New Hampshire legislature also passed a bill permitting same-sex marriage. (CNN). HB 436 provides however that:
Members of the clergy as described in RSA 457:31 or other persons otherwise authorized under law to solemnize a marriage shall not be obligated or otherwise required by law to officiate at any particular civil marriage or religious rite of marriage in violation of their right to free exercise of religion protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution or by part I, article 5 of the New Hampshire constitution.The state Senate last week approved the bill by a vote of 13-11. Yesterday the House approved it by a vote of 178-167. The Concord Monitor says that it is unclear whether or not Gov. John Lynch will veto the bill. In the past he has said that his personal views are opposed to same-sex marriage.
Obama's Mother Was Baptized Posthumously By Mormons
According to Mormon beliefs, after vicarious baptism, the deceased can choose whether or not to accept the ordinances. (About.com.) In the past, Mormon attempts to posthumously baptize Holocaust victims has generated tensions between the LDS Church and the Jewish community. (AP, 11/11/2008).
Hawaii Legislature Passes Resolution Proclaiming "Islam Day"
Tentative Ruling By California Judge Goes Against Break-Away Episcopal Diocese
According to yesterday's Religious Intelligence, the court held a hearing on May 5 for the parties to respond to the tentative ruling. In the hearing, attorneys for the break-away diocese argued that summary judgment is improper because there is a factual dispute about whether the Episcopal Church is "hierarchical." They also claim that the church failed to give proper notice of the meeting at which Lamb was elected as the continuing bishop. The Episcopal Church responded that the court lacks authority to review its internal procedures. Virtue Online also reports on the court's tentative ruling.
Legislative Invocations Reprinted By Paper
Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences Focuses On Human Rights
Mary Ann Glendon, president of the the Academy, delivered remarks (full text) upon being received by the Pontiff during the plenary session. After focusing on the Church's "long engagement with human rights," she also commented that: "in today's world, ironically, many threats to the dignity of the person have appeared in the guise of human rights."In the middle of the last century, after the vast suffering caused by two terrible world wars and the unspeakable crimes perpetrated by totalitarian ideologies, the international community acquired a new system of international law based on human rights....
The Church's action in promoting human rights is therefore supported by rational reflection, in such a way that these rights can be presented to all people of good will, independently of any religious affiliation they may have. Nevertheless..., human reason must undergo constant purification by faith, insofar as it is always in danger of a certain ethical blindness caused by disordered passions and sin; and, on the other hand, insofar as human rights need to be re-appropriated by every generation and by each individual....
This perspective draws attention to some of the most critical social problems of recent decades, such as the growing awareness - which has in part arisen with globalisation and the present economic crisis - of a flagrant contrast between the equal attribution of rights and the unequal access to the means of attaining those rights. For Christians ... it is a shameful tragedy that one-fifth of humanity still goes hungry. Assuring an adequate food supply, like the protection of vital resources such as water and energy, requires all international leaders to collaborate in ... promoting solidarity and subsidiarity with the weakest regions and peoples of the planet as the most effective strategy for eliminating social inequalities ... and for increasing global security.
Wednesday, May 06, 2009
Judge McConnell, 1st Amendment Expert, Will Move From 10th Circuit To Stanford
DC Council, Over Religious Objections, Votes To Recognize Gay Marriages From Elsewhere
Non-Muslims In Northwest Pakistan Dislocated By Taliban
HUD Swears In Assistant Secretary For Fair Housing
UN Special Rapporteur Evaluates Religious Freedom In Serbia
Cert. Petition To Be Filed In Episcopal Church Property Dispute
UPDATE: Here is the petition for certiorari that was filed on June 24, 2009.
Compliance, Or Not, With Religious Customs Relevant To Suicide Finding
Tuesday, May 05, 2009
Al Jazeera Video Shows U.S. Soldiers Who Want To Proselytize In Afghanistan
While General Order No. 1 issued by the U.S. military's central command specifically bans "proselytising of any religion, faith or practice, "Sergeant Jon Watt tells a group of soldiers: "you can't proselytise, but you can give gifts." In a second report today, Al Jazeera says that the U.S. military has confiscated the Bibles and reprimanded the soldiers who appear in the video. Col. Greg Julian told Al Jazeera: "Most of this is taken out of context ... this is irresponsible and inappropriate journalism.... There is no effort to go out and proselytise to Afghans." [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]
French Trial of Gang Members Accused of Anti-Semitic Torture Is Closed To Press
"Joe the Plumber" Gives His Views on Religion and Politics
New Website On "Islamic Lawfare"
attempts by supporters of radical Islam to suppress free discourse on Islam and terrorism by (1) exploiting Western legal systems and traditions and (2) recruiting state actors and international organizations such as the United Nations.I have added the website to the "Resources" section of the Religion Clause sidebar.
Turkish Author Tried In Abstentia For Insulting Religious Values
Leaders In Hungary Propose Ban on Holocaust Denial and Hate Speech
Claims By Chuch Founder Against City Employees Dismissed
Monday, May 04, 2009
Cert. Denied In Challenge To Marijuana Laws
Controversy Continues Over UNLV's Proposed Policy On Bias Incidents
verbal, written, or physical acts of intimidation, coercion, interference, frivolous claims, discrimination, and sexual or other harassment motivated, in whole or in part, by bias based on actual or perceived race, ethnicity, color, religion, creed, sex (including gender identity or expression, or a pregnancy related condition), sexual orientation, national origin, military status or military obligations, disability (including veterans with service-connected disabilities), age, marital status, physical appearance, political affiliation, or on the basis of exercise of rights secured by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution.... Bias incidents do not include statements made on controversial issues that serve to promote intellectual inquiry into those issues. While such statements and related discussion can cause feelings of discomfort, a "reasonable person" can and must differentiate these statements from bias incidents.The draft encourages reporting of bias incidents to UNLV police. After the ACLU of Nevada criticized the draft as an unconstitutional infringement on free speech, Nevada's chancellor of public higher education called for the policy to be rewritten. (Las Vegas Sun, 4/27). But now faculty are concerned that UNLV President David Ashley chose Christine Clark, the vice president of diversity and inclusion, to head a task force to review the draft. She helped develop the initial draft, and critics say she ignored their concerns at that time. (Las Vegas Sun, 5/4). The policy was drafted in response to a call by the state Board of Regents last year for all state schools to develop policies on bias incidents. (Las Vegas Sun, 4/25.)
Pakistan Islamists Reject Sharia Court Set Up By Government In Peace Deal
Pope Travels To Jordan, Israel, West Bank At End of This Week
Recent Articles and Books of Interest
- Jessie Hill, Of Christmas Trees and Corpus Christi: Ceremonial Deism and Change in Meaning over Time, (Duke Law Journal, Vol. 59, January 2010).
- Caroline Mala Corbin, The First Amendment Right Against Compelled Listening, (Boston University Law Review, Vol. 89, 2009).
- Mohamed R. Hassanien, International Law Fights Terrorism in the Muslim World: A Middle Eastern Perspective, 36 Denver Journal of International Law & Policy 221-253 (2008).
- Frank Ravitch, Playing the Proof Game: Intelligent Design and the Law, 113 Penn State Law Review 841-897 (2009).
- Mark Strasser, The Protection and Alienation of Religious Minorities: On the Evolution of the Endorsement Test, 2008 Michigan State Law Review 667-724.
- Symposium--First Amendment Rights in America's Public Schools: From the Schoolhouse Gate to the Courthouse Steps. Welcoming remarks by Rex R. Perschbacher and Alan Brownstein; articles by Vikram David Amer, Kenneth Starr, R. George Wright, Alan Brownstein, Erwin Chemerinsky, Steven K. Green, Joan W. Howarth, Melissa Rogers and Steven D. Smith. 42 UC Davis Law Review 631-1057 (2009).
- Symposium: Islam, Democracy, and Nation Building. Articles by Joseph N. Kickasola, John H. Johns, Stephen Schwartz, Mehrangiz Kar, Thomas Najjar and Jennifer Jefferis; note by Eva M. Robinson. 6 Regent Journal of International Law 271-499 (2008).
- Brian Leiter, Why Tolerate Religion?, 25 Constitutional Commentary 1-27 (2008).
- John Witte, The Sins of the Fathers: The Law and Theology of Illegitimacy Reconsidered, (Cambridge Univ. Press, April 2009), reviewed by the Center for the Study of Law and Religion.
- T. Jeremy Gunn, Spiritual Weapons: The Cold War and the Forging of an American National Religion, (Praeger Publishers, Dec. 2008), reviewed by the Center for the Study of Law and Religion.
Sunday, May 03, 2009
Q&A on Hate Crimes Bill Seeks To Reassure Religious Leaders
Current federal law only protects against hate crimes based on[Thanks to Michael Lieberman for the lead.]
religion if the person was targeted because they were engaged in a federally protected activity like voting or going to school. The legislation under consideration by Congress would remove that limitation.