Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Kalanges on Radical Orthodoxy

Professor Kristine Kalanges (Notre Dame) is posting over at the Center for Law and Religion Forum this month.  Come have a look at Kristine's very interesting thoughts involving the scholarship of the theologian William T. Cavanaugh (DePaul).

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

First Amendment Nuggets: Inazu's New Piece and the Conclusion of the Richman/Crane Debate

Lots of great new stuff toward which to direct your attention.

First, check out our friend John Inazu's excellent new piece, The Four Freedoms and the Future of Religious Liberty.  The article continues John's illuminating work on the way in which the distinct freedoms enumerated in the First Amendment are being collapsed into a single, undifferentiated principle -- in this case, speech; in some of John's previous work, the freedom of association (and in particular its speech-y features).  I am, to put it mildly, sympathetic to the thesis that the contemporary impulse is toward collapsing rights and the values that underwrite them, rather than preserving their distinctiveness.  Here is the abstract:

The First Amendment’s rights of speech, press, religion, and assembly were once “interwoven” but distinct. Together, these freedoms advanced a pluralist skepticism of state orthodoxy that protected religious and other forms of liberty. The connections among these rights were evident at the Framing. They were also prominent during the 1930s and 1940s, when legal and political rhetoric recognized the “preferred position” of the “Four Freedoms.” We have lost sight of the Four Freedoms, supplanting their unified distinctiveness with an undifferentiated free speech framework driven by unsatisfying concepts like content neutrality and public forum analysis. It did not have to be this way, and it may not be too late to change course. This Article seeks to renew the pluralist emphasis once represented by the Four Freedoms.

The consequences of losing the pluralist vision are nowhere more evident than in the diminishing constitutional protections for religious groups, which are paradigmatic of the expressive, dissenting, and culture-forming groups of civil society. The Four Freedoms remind us that the boundaries of religious liberty have never rested solely in the First Amendment’s free exercise clause — religious liberty is best strengthened by ensuring robust protections of more general forms of liberty. But the normative effort to reclaim pluralism is not without costs, and it confronts powerful objections from anti-discrimination norms pertaining to race, gender, and sexual orientation — objections that cannot go unanswered.

Second, take a look at the conclusion of the debate between Barak Richman and Dan Crane on the issue of the application of the ministerial exception to the question of conservative Judaism and the hiring of rabbis.  Of particular interest, I thought, was each man's discussion of the respective "creep" that can occur -- either for the Establishment Clause or for the antitrust laws (and, as Barak says, on the former check out Mike Helfand's recent excellent work).  Barak's post is here; Dan's response is here.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

The Eidolon: Thoughts on Solum's New Piece

By a route obscure and lonely,Thule

Haunted by ill angels only,

Where an eidolon named Night,

On a black throne reigns upright,

I have wandered home but newly

From this ultimate dim Thule.

Maybe it's because Halloween is upon us that as I read Larry Solum's terrific new piece, The Effects of NFIB v. Sebelius and the Constitutional Gestalt, I thought about Edgar Allan Poe's poem and the mysterious eidolon (as well as the unmappable isle of Thule).  An eidolon can mean either an unachievable ideal or an insubstantial phantom; both images suit my purposes.  Larry opts for the more psychiatrically sober metaphor of the gestalt to describe the "indirect effects" of the Commerce and N/P Clause portions of the health care case.  In this post, I thought to (a) describe his discussion of those indirect effects; (b) note a similar (even if not parallel) development in the Supreme Court's treatment of the Free Exercise Clause; and (c) pose 2 questions about the sorts of doctrinally destabilizing resolutions that this Court seemingly favors.

Continue reading

Hamilton on the New York Marriage Equality Act and its Religious Exceptions

My student and one of our terrific fellows at the St. John's Center for Law and Religion, Andrew Hamilton, has posted, The New York Marriage Equality Act and the Strength of its Religious Exceptions.  The paper (supervised by my colleague Mark Movsesian) explores whether the religious exceptions under the New York same-sex marriage law allow Catholic Charities to refuse to place foster children with same-sex couples.

We're also proud to announce that Andy's paper won third prize in the national "Religious Freedom Student Writing Competition."  It will be published in a forthcoming issue of the Journal of Catholic Legal Studies.  Andrew will be traveling down to Washington D.C. this Thursday to attend the  2012 International Religious Liberty Award Dinner, whose guest of honor is Douglas Laycock.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Conservative Judaism, Cartelization, and the Ministerial Exception: Barak Richman and Daniel Crane Debate

Professors Barak Richman (Duke) and Daniel Crane (Michigan) are engaging in a very interesting debate about an issue of interest to MOJ readers involving the process for hiring rabbis in conservative Judaism.  Professor Richman believes that the process violates the antitrust laws and is also not protected by the First Amendment.  Professor Crane disagrees (his first post will appear shortly).  The first posts will involve the antitrust issue; the second series will involve the constitutional question.  Come by and visit at your leisure.

UPDATE: Barak's first post is here.  Dan's reply is here.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Drakeman on Original Meaning, Original Intent, and Religious Liberty

I wanted to point readers to this post by Donald Drakeman about original meaning and original intent.  Don raises a number of points that I've been having a hard time wrapping my mind around with respect to the contemporary discussion of new (or new new) originalism.  First, are there still advocates (besides Don) of the utility of original intent originalism floating about?  I think there are (Larry Alexander comes to mind, and I have a memory of something on this by Steve Smith, too) but they seem to be grossly (and increasingly?) outnumbered by original meaning originalists.  I should also note that Don, from my reading of his work, is not exclusivist about original intent.  He simply thinks it might be useful evidence to consider.  Second, is what Don says about the equivalence between the substantial underdeterminacy of original meaning originalism and original intent originalism accepted by original meaning originalists (see Don's example about the varying interpretations of establishment in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, and for more examples, see his book)?  There may, of course, be reasons to opt for original meaning over original intent (though the hypothetical time-traveling law professor analogy presents its own problems), but isn't Don right that mitigating the problems of underdeterminacy surely is unlikely to be one of them?  

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Live Webcast: Paulsen and Koppelman Debate on Religious Liberty in the 2012 Election at St. John's

Professors Mike Paulsen and Andy Koppelman will have a debate today at 4:00 at St. John's Law School on Religious Liberty and the 2012 election.  If you are not fortunate enough to visit us in fair Queens today but would like to listen in, please follow this link to a live webcast of the event.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

The Musical Canon: The Sanctus from Bach's B Minor Mass

Since MOJ readers may be tiring of my occasional musical interjections, I thought it might be fun to create a little structure and inaugurate a tradition.  So here's something new about something old: each Sunday, I'll post about a work that belongs in the musical canon of classical religious music.  What is the canon?  It's comprised of the pieces that are on my list!  I invite informed and elegantly composed comments about the music.

Here's a worthy lead-off hitter: Bach's magnificent, soaring, mighty Sanctus from his powerful B minor Mass, finished late in his life for the services at St. Thomasschule in Leipzig.  (It says in one of my reference works that Bach left his previous post as Kappelmeister at Cöthen because his patron's marriage "brought about a change of musical values.  The serious and the artistic were now shunned.").  His time in Leipzig was not happy, and included the death of no less than six children.  Somehow neither his industry nor his sheer brilliance ever flagged.  As my book says, "He lived but to worship God and to write music."

My favorite part of the Sanctus is right at the beginning, before the six-parts break out into the typical Bach beauty.  The B minor Mass is, in my view, the greatest Mass ever written and one of the greatest works in all of music.  This recording is by Otto Klemperer (himself a very interesting figure), who conducts it a little bit faster than you sometimes hear it, which is a good thing.  

Friday, September 21, 2012

Speech and Religion in the U.S. and France

I've got a little interview on the legal positions of the United States and France on free speech and religious liberty with the magazine, France-Amérique.  My basic position is that the countries are less far apart than is commonly supposed.  Both countries are struggling with the same sorts of issues and with the same problem of reaching an appropriate equilibrium among values in tension.  That is why their legal settlements can best be understood and studied as a product of their respective histories and traditions, rather than as the result of an overarching difference of political principle.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Paulsen and Koppelman Debate: Religious Liberty in the 2012 Election at St. John's

The Center for Law and Religion St. John's is excited to host a debate in honor of Constitution Day (which I believe was officially yesterday) between Mike Paulsen and Andy Koppelman titled "Religious Liberty in the 2012 Election."  The event will occur on September 27 (next Thursday) at SJU.  More data here.  We are trying to arrange some sort of live stream, about which I'll have an update if it materializes.

Mike and Andy are both deeply knowledgeable and a whole lot of fun to watch, so I expect the event to be informative and a treat.