Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, May 13, 2010
NGO's Oppose 5 Countries Running For Seats On UN Human Rights Council
New York Church Designated As Landmark Over Leaders' Objections
Evangelicals Call For "Just Assimilation" Immigration Policy
Among the signers of the statement were Liberty Counsel's Matt Staver, and Southern Baptist Convention's Richard Land. Also signing was the head of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference.We must first secure our borders before we can implement a broader just assimilation immigration policy. Secure borders are not closed borders....
After securing our borders, we should allow the millions of undocumented and otherwise law-abiding persons living in our midst to come out of the shadows. The pathway for earned legal citizenship or temporary residency should involve a program of legalization for undocumented persons in the United States, subject to appropriate penalties, waiting periods, background checks, evidence of moral character, a commitment to full participation in American society through an understanding of the English language, the rights and duties of citizens and the structure of America’s government, and the embrace of American values.
We must return to a rational immigration policy that acknowledges that we are both a nation of immigrants and a nation of laws. It is our obligation to provide a just solution to those people who are currently undocumented under the present policy. That solution is neither amnesty nor mass deportation.
New Details of Elena Kagan's Bat Mitzvah Are Revealed
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Protesters Prevent Cartoonist Vilks From Completing Talk On Art and Free Speech at Uppsala University
Court Refuses To Dismiss Chabad's Claims Against Historic Commission Members
British Police Recognize Pagan Officers Association
Town's Emergency 911 Prayer Group Helps As Bad Weather Threatens
Indian Tribe Now Excluded From Sacred Site In California Marine Life Protection Initiative
French Parliament Adopts Non-Binding Resolution Opposing the Burqa
Meanwhile yesterday, the Council of Europe announced in a press release that its Parliamentary Assembly's Committee on Culture, Science and Education has adopted a resolution opposing a general ban on the niqab or burqa for women who "genuinely and freely desire" to wear it. It said a more limited ban for security purposes or where public or professional functions call for religious neutrality or showing of one's face may be justified. However a broader ban may violate freedom of religion protected by the European Convention on Human Rights.
Muslim Police Officer's Religious Discrimination Claim Dismissed
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Sunrise Rock Cross-- Focus of SCOTUS Decision-- Stolen By Vandals
Religious Advocacy Groups Issue Statements On Kagan Nomination
Americans United for Separation of Church and State said: "We simply don’t know much about Elena Kagan’s views on church-state separation.... It's the job of the Senate Judiciary Committee to fill in the picture by asking her questions about how religion and government should interact." Liberty Counsel also raised questions: "The Senate should press hard to question Elena Kagan on her judicial philosophy. The public deserves to know whether Kagan will use her transnational law philosophy as a lens through which she views the Constitution. And the public needs to know whether her personal views will trump the Constitution, as they appeared to do when she banned military recruiters from campus."
The Jewish Council for Public Affairs release said: "Supreme Court nominees should be held the highest standard and be fully committed to protecting justice for all and our nation's core values described in the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.... We encourage Senators to give Ms. Kagan full and fair consideration and hope all sides keep discussions and debate civil." The Muslim Public Affairs Council said: "We call upon Ms. Kagan, if she is confirmed, to follow in the footsteps of Justice Stevens in his commitment to preserving individual freedoms, checking executive power, and upholding the rule of law which have made America a better place for over 35 years."
In Ontario Unemployed Teachers Are Changing Religion To Improve Job Chances
First Freedom Center Has New President
ambassador-at-large and special envoy for Holocaust issues for the State Department from 2002 to 2003, has become president of the First Freedom Center. The Center is devoted to increasing understanding and respect for religious liberty. Bell wants to expand the organization's national and international educational efforts, and expand the Center's use of electronic media to reach out to more schools and universities.
Monday, May 10, 2010
Elena Kagan Nominated By Obama To Supreme Court [UPDATED]
Much of Kagan's published scholarly writings (full list at pp. 52-53 of Hearings) focus on the constitutional issues surrounding the regulation of hate speech. These include: The Changing Faces of First Amendment Neutrality: R.A.V. v. St. Paul, Rust v. Sullivan, and the Problem of Content-Based Underinclusion, 1992 Supreme Court Review 29 [Hein-on-Line link]; Regulation of Hate Speech and Pornography After R.A.V., 60 Univ. Chi. L. Rev. 873 (1993) [LEXIS link]; When A Speech Code Is A Speech Code: The Stanford Policy and the Theory of Incidental Restraints, 29 UC Davis L. Rev. 957 (1996); and Private Speech, Public Purpose: The Role of Governmental Motive in First Amendment Doctrine, 63 U. Chi. L. Rev. 413 (1996) [LEXIS link].
During Kagan's confirmation hearings for Solicitor General, she was questioned (Hearings at pp. 97-98) about a memo she wrote as a law clerk for Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall suggesting that government funding through the Adolescent Family Life Act for faith-based social service organizations to discourage teen pregnancy was improper because inevitably religious teaching would be injected into the organizations' social services. At her hearings, she rejected her earlier position, saying in written answers that her earlier view was "deeply mistaken" and that she now believes that it is incorrect to presume that a religious organization will use grant funds in an impermissible way to further religion.
Swedish Law Firm Sues Government For Discrimination After Muslim Lawyer Is Removed From Case
Court Settles Dispute Between Church and Its Former Treasurer
Recent Articles and Book of Interest
From SSRN:
- Salim Farrar, The Role of the Defence in Islamic Law, (Sydney Law School Research Paper No. 10/42, May 4, 2010).
- Mark L. Movsesian, Elusive Equality: The Armenian Genocide and the Failure of Ottoman Legal Reform, (University of St. Thomas Journal of Law & Public Policy, Forthcoming).
- Frederick Mark Gedicks, Undoing Neutrality? From Separation to Tolerance in Establishment Clause Jurisprudence, (Willamette Law Review, 2010).
From SmartCILP:
- Alex Schulman, Kulturkampf and Spite: The Rehnquist Court and American "Theoconservatism", [Abstract], 22 Law & Literature 48-75 (2010).
New Book:
- Elaine Howard Ecklund, Science vs. Religion: What Scientists Really Think, (Oxford Univ. Press, May 6, 2010).
Sunday, May 09, 2010
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Smith v. Ludwick, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 42396 (ED MI, April 30, 2010), a Michigan federal district court dismissed an inmate's habeas corpus action in which he complained that he was denied the right to participate in the kosher meal program. Habeas is not available to challenge conditions of confinement, as opposed to the length or duration of a sentence.
In George v. Morgan, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 42667 (D DE, April 30, 2010), a Delaware federal district judge permitted an inmate to proceed with his claim that he was n ot allowed to attend chapel services or receive spiritual counseling. He also claimed that prison officials punished him for praying in his cell, telling him that talking to God is a sign of being crazy.
In Ramziddin v. Monmouth County Sheriff Department, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 42798 (D NJ, April 30, 2010), a New Jersey federal district court dismissed without prejudice a Muslim pre-trial detainee's clams that correctional officials violated his free exercise rights when they confiscated his prayer rug for security reasons, limited the areas in which he could wear his kufi, failed to serve meals that conform to his religious preferences, and forced him to pray in "awkward and unsanitary" conditions in the multi-purpose room or in cells.
In Ind v. Colorado Department of Corrections, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43312 (D CO, March 23, 2010), a Colorado federal magistrate judge recommend that an inmate who followed a branch of the Christian Identity Movement be allowed to proceed with his RLUIPA claims for an injunction stemming from his allegations that he was denied the opportunity to take communion alone in his cell and was denied religious texts. It held that one of the defendants had qualified immunity as to damage claims.
In Greenfield v. Corzine, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44433 (D NJ, May 6, 2010), a New Jersey federal district court held that a civil committee under the Sexually Violent Predator Act failed to allege sufficient facts to state a free exercise claim when he alleged only that he was denied the right to participate in religious services while he was in "map" for 60 days in 2006. Also the statute of limitations had run on the claim.
In Rouser v. White, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44151 (ED CA, April 15, 2010), a California federal district court issued a preliminary injunction in a lawsuit filed by a Wiccan prisoner alleging various infringements of his rights under the free exercise clause and RLUIPA. The injunction required that prison officials allow plaintiff to keep and maintain religious texts (including but not limited to A Witches' Bible Compleat (the "Wiccan Bible"), that they allow him to obtain group Wiccan items before Wiccan group services; that they do not take or destroy plaintiff's religious articles; that plaintiff be provided a way to order and receive religious items; that officials announce Wiccan services to the same extent they announce services for the mainstream faiths; that plaintiff be allowed to access the outdoor, nature-based religious area when Wiccan services are scheduled; and that plaintiff be given access to the fire pit during religious services.