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2015, American Diplomacy
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7 pages
1 file
For Foreign Service Officers, the American principle of "separation of church and state" need not inhibit discussion of religion's role in American society, in other countries, or in international affairs. The American norm is religious liberty, always and everywhere a goal of American foreign policy. Education on religious liberty begins with the First Amendment to the Constitution, the Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom (1786), and President George Washington's letters to religious congregations (1789-1793). Discussions call for clear word choices – "establishment," "toleration," "tolerance," "freedom to worship," "freedom of worship," "freedom of conscience," and "freedom of religion." "Religious freedom" or "religious liberty" is the American standard, not mere "toleration."
Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics, 2020
The eighteenth-century American founders believed that religion is special and deserves special constitutional protection, and that all peaceable faiths must be drawn into the constitutional process and protection. The founders introduced six constitutional principles for the protection of religious freedom-freedom of conscience, free exercise of religion, religious pluralism, religious equality, separation of church and state, and no state establishment of religion. Since the 1940s, the United States Supreme Court has upheld these religious freedom principles in more 170 cases, albeit unevenly of late. Moreover, in recent years religious freedom has come under sharp popular and academic attack, particularly as religious pathologies have come to light and religious freedom claims have clashed with sexual liberty claims. This Essay calls for a return to the first principles of religious freedom for all, at home and abroad, and for a new balance between religious freedom and other fundamental rights claims.
The Oxford Handbook on Church-State Relations in America, ed. Derek Davis, 2011
This Article compares First Amendment religious liberty with prevailing international human rights norms on religious freedom, particularly as set out in the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the 1981 UN Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief, the 1989 Vienna Concluding Documents. The United States Supreme Court’s cases on freedom of conscience, free exercise of religion, and religious equality and non-discrimination compare favorably to international standards, although the Court’s repeated failure to protect the distinct religious freedom claims of Native American groups falls short. The Supreme Court cases defending the principle of separation of church and state mesh well with international concerns for the rights and autonomy of religious groups, but go beyond international norms in largely removing religious freedom from public education.
Notre Dame Law Review, 2016
This Article challenges the criticisms of religious freedom that have emerged among recent academics and politicians, and the growing subordination of religious freedom to sexual freedom claims. In particular, we analyze recent critical scholarship that claims that religious liberty was not important to the American founders and that calls for the removal of special religious exemptions and accommodations because they are said to threaten other fundamental rights and to privilege religion unfairly. These critical arguments we find historically false, philosophically misguided, sociologically one-sided, and increasingly dangerous given the perilous state of religious freedom around the world today. We call for a return to the founders' insights that religion deserves special constitutional protection and that religious freedom must be open to all forms of religion and belief. We also call for a proper balancing of the enduring principles of freedom of conscience, free exercise of religion, religious pluralism, religious equality, separation of church and state, and disestablishment of religion, which together have helped forge the unique protection of religious freedom that America holds out to all its citizens, and to the world.
American Political Science Review, 2003
Although James Madison has been invoked by justices and judicial scholars for over 100 years, Madison's principle of religious liberty has never been fully grasped or adopted by the Supreme Court. Judges and scholars have failed to understand Madison's radical but simple teaching that religion is not part of the social compact and, therefore, that the state may not take religion within its cognizance. In this article I set forth Madison's principle of " noncognizance " in light of the social compact theory he articulates in the " Memorial and Remonstrance. " I then attempt to show how it consistently explains Madison's political actions and writings on religious liberty. I conclude by explaining how a " Madisonian " approach, properly understood, would adjudicate the First Amendment's religion clauses.
2017 Job Market Writing Sample. Please do not cite. For updated version of the book manuscript, of this this paper was a VERY early draft, please contact me. The United States is the only country on earth which promotes international religious freedom as one of its core foreign policy objectives. I argue that two ideological shifts account this institutional behavior: First, beginning in the early 20th century, American conceptions of religious freedom changed from an exclusive definition (i.e. White Protestants) to one of inclusion (i.e, all religious faiths). Second, national security policy during the Cold War transformed policy behavior away from reactionary policies toward proactive ones. These policy shifts exhibit path dependent characteristics, which influence later legislative behavior in the 1998 International Religious Freedom Act (IRFA).
Loyola of Los Angeles law review, 1998
Is religion special, and does it, accordingly, deserve unique constitutional protections? A number of leading scholars now say it is not, and it doesn’t. In his recent thought-provoking article, “What if Religion Is Not Special?” Micah Schwartzman contends that “religion cannot be distinguished from many other beliefs and practices as warranting special constitutional treatment.” He thus rejects the originalist construction of Free Exercise exemptions championed by Michael McConnell, at least insofar as it extends exemptions exclusively to religious entities. But what if religious liberty does not mean exemptions? And if religious liberty does not mean exemptions, what protection would the First Amendment offer? Can religion retain its special Free Exercise status while not dictating constitutional exemptionism? My article addresses those questions by taking a different approach to religion’s specialness, one that does not presume the Free Exercise Clause means exemptions. It attempts to set forth an alternative paradigm for the constitutional protection of religious liberty by explaining why the founders thought religion is special and by articulating their attendant constitutionalism of religious freedom. In doing so, it continues a line of inquiry, begun elsewhere, that attempts to distinguish the founders’ natural rights constitutionalism from what I call modern moral autonomy exemptionism. The article, first, documents the founders’ shared understanding that religious liberty is a natural right possessed by all individuals. Secondly, it explains what the American founders meant when they labeled aspects of religious liberty an “unalienable” natural right. The article next clarifies the founders’ understanding of religion’s special constitutional status, which for them primarily meant specific jurisdictional limits on state sovereignty rather than exemptions. Finally, the article attempts to further clarify the founders’ constitutionalism of religious freedom by explaining how they understood natural rights to have natural limits.
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