How Free Can Religion Be?

Author: Bezanson   Randall P.  

Publisher: University of Illinois Press‎

Publication year: 2006

E-ISBN: 9780252090530

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780252031120

Subject: B9 Religion;D9 Law

Keyword: 宗教,法律

Language: ENG

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Description

Randall P. Bezanson's How Free Can Religion Be? explores the Supreme Court's varied history of interpreting the religious guarantees outlined in the First Amendment. The book discusses eight provocative Supreme Court decisions to track the evolution of Free Exercise and Establishment Clause doctrine, focusing on the court's shift from strict separation of church and state to a position where the government accommodates and even fosters religion._x000B__x000B_Beginning with samples from the latter half of the nineteenth century, the detailed case studies present new problems and revisit some old ones as well: the purported belief of polygamy in the Mormon Church; state support for religious schools; the teaching of evolution and creationism in public schools; Amish claims for exemption from compulsory education laws; comparable claims for Native American religion in relation to drug laws; and rights of free speech and equal access by religious groups in colleges and public schools.

Chapter

Title Page

Copyright Page

Contents

Preface

Introduction

Stage I. The Old Time Religion: Separation of Church and State

1. God's Law or Caesar's? The Free Exercise of Religion

2. The Wall of Separation: "No law respecting an establishment of religion . . ."

Stage II: The Time of Testing

3. The Amish Conundrum: The Conflict between Free Exercise and Non-establishment

4. Darwin versus Genesis

5. School Prayer

Stage III. The New Awakening

6. Peyote: God versus Caesar, Revisited

7. Non-establishment as Nondiscrimination

8. Equality as a Sword: The Ghost of Everson

Religion in America

Suggested Reading

Index

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