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.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Let Us Now Praise (My) Estimable Colleagues

Abduh An-Na'im, I am proud to say, is my colleague.  (See the previous post).  So too, I am proud to say, is the unconscionably prolific John Witte--who, as many of you know,  directs Emory's Center for the Study of Law and Religion, and whose op-ed on polygamy will appear in this Sunday's Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

The Legal Challenges of Religious Polygamy


John Witte, Jr. 

A century and a half ago, a group of Mormons made national headlines by claiming a First Amendment right to practice polygamy, despite criminal laws against it. In four cases from 1879-1890, the United States Supreme Court firmly rejected their claim, and threatened to dissolve the Mormon church if it persisted. Part of the Court’s argument was historical: the common law has always defined marriage as monogamous, and to change those rules “would be a return to barbarism.” Part of the Court’s argument was prudential: religious liberty can never become a license to violate general criminal laws, “else chaos will ensue.” And part of the Court’s argument was sociological: monogamous marriage “is the cornerstone of civilization,” and it cannot be moved without upending our whole culture.  These old cases are still the law of the land, and most Mormons renounced polygamy after 1890.        The question of religious polygamy is back in the headlines – this time involving a fundamentalist Mormon group on a Texas ranch that has retained the church’s traditional polygamist practices. Many of the legal questions raised by this group are easy. Under-aged and coerced marriages, statutory rape, and child abuse are all serious crimes. Those adults on the ranch who have committed these crimes, or intentionally aided and abetted them, are going to jail. They have no claim of religious freedom that will excuse them, and no claim of privacy that will protect them.  Dealing with the children, ensuring proper procedures, sorting out the evidence, and the like are all practically messy and emotionally charged questions, but not legally hard.

The harder legal question is whether criminalizing polygamy is still constitutional. Texas and other every state still have these laws on these books. Can these criminal laws withstand a challenge that they violates an individual’s constitutional rights to private liberty, equal protection, and religious liberty. In the nineteenth century, none of these rights claims was available. Now they are, and they protect every adult person’s rights to consensual sex, marriage, procreation, contraception, cohabitation, sodomy, and many other aspects of sexual privacy and autonomy. May a state prohibit polygamists from these same rights, particularly if they are inspired by religious convictions?  What rationales for criminalizing polygamy are so compelling that they can overcome these strong constitutional objections?

Theologians cite the Bible which says that “two” -- not three or four – parties join in “one flesh” to form a marriage. Others remind us that the early biblical polygamists did not fare so well. Think of the problems confronted by Abraham with Sarah and Hagar, or Jacob with Rachel and Leah.  Or think of King Solomon with his thousand wives; their children ended up killing each other.  This may be a strong foundation for a church or synagogue to prohibit polygamy among its voluntary members, but can arguments straight from the Bible prevail in a pluralistic nation that prohibits the establishment of religion?

Feminists pose equal protection arguments: Why should the state permit one man to have several wives, but not one woman to have several husbands? After getting past the jokes about which husband would click the remote or which woman would be so crazy, does this equal protection argument sound any stronger than that of polygamists who just want the same right of private association as everyone else?

Public health experts raise concerns about communicable diseases among children within the extended household, and transmittable sexual diseases within the rotating marital bed.  But what about all those other group gatherings -- from schools and churches to malls and dorms -- that children occupy: must they be closed, too, for fear of contagion? And isn’t self-contained polygamous sex much safer than casual sex with multiple partners which is constitutionally protected?

Political scientists raise worries about administrative inefficiency. After all, so much of our law presupposes a single definition of marriage and family life. What would we do if the man dies, or one of the wives files for divorce? There are no guidelines about how to allocate the marital property, military benefits, life insurance, and the like. But we have found a way to do this for the vast numbers of single, mixed parent, and multiple generation households that collectively far outnumber families with two parents and their natural children.  This is administratively doable.

Child experts raise serious concerns about the development of children of polygamy. Won’t these children be confused by the mixed parental signals and attachments, and by the inevitable rivalries and rancor with their half siblings? And won’t these children be stigmatized by their peers for being different?  These arguments have some bite. But how different is the polygamous lifestyle in our current pluralistic culture?  Children are raised by live-in grandparents, nannies, and day care centers.  They live in large blended families and boarding schools. Their parents may be gay and lesbian couples, or their families may have religious dress codes that set them apart from their peers.  Are children of polygamy so differently positioned?

The strongest argument against polygamy is the argument from moral repugnance. Polygamy is inherently wrong -- “just gross” as my law students will say, “malum in se” as we law professors put it. Many states legislate against a lot of activities -- slavery, indentured servitude, gambling, prostitution, obscenity, bestiality, incest, sex with minors, self-mutilation, organ-selling, and more -- just because those activities are wrong or they inevitably foster wrongdoing. That someone wants to engage in these activities voluntarily for reasons of religion, bravery, custom, or autonomy makes no difference. That other cultures or continents allow such activities also makes no difference.  For nearly two millennia, the Western tradition has included polygamy among the crimes that are inherently wrong. Not just because polygamy is unbiblical, unusual, unsafe, or unsavory. But also because polygamy routinizes patriarchy, jeopardizes consent, fractures fidelity, divides loyalty, dilutes devotion, fosters inequity, promotes rivalry, foments lust, condones adultery, confuses children, and more. Not in every case, to be sure, but in enough cases to make the practice of polygamy too risky to condone.

                Furthermore, allowing religious polygamy as an exception to the rules is even more dangerous, because it will make some churches and mosques a law unto themselves. Again, some religious communities and their members might well thrive with the freedom to practice polygamy. But inevitably closed repressive regimes like the Texas ranch compound will also emerge -- with under-aged girls duped or coerced into sex and marriages with older men, with women and children trapped in sectarian communities with no realistic access to help or protection from the state and no real legal recourse against a church or mosque that is just following its own rules.  We prize liberty, equality, and consent in this country too highly to court such a risk. If you’re not sure, just ask some of those moms and kids on the Texas ranch.

Abduh An-Na'im v. Noah Feldman: No Contest, IMHO

And not because Abduh is my colleague!

USNews

Why Islamic States Would Be Bad for Muslims

Two scholars, despite their differences, say that defining 'sharia' is crucial to finding a healthy place for religion in Muslim nations

Posted May 1, 2008

Maybe it's an only-in-America sort of irony: A prominent scholar who happens to be Jewish makes the case for more Islamic sharia law in Muslim-majority states, while another distinguished legal scholar, a devout Muslim, argues that the best thing for those states, and for sharia, is to keep them separate.

But beyond the little irony, there is much at stake in the difference of opinion that emerges from their respective books: Noah Feldman's The Fall and Rise of the Islamic State and Abdullah Ahmed An-Na'im's Islam and the Secular State: Negotiating the Future of Shari'a. That difference is of such crucial importance, in fact, that its wise resolution should be of great concern to all who claim to be interested in the cause of promoting democracy in the predominantly Muslim parts of the world.

Both authors are distinguished scholars in their field. Feldman, a prolific writer (What We Owe Iraq, Divided by God) and professor at Harvard Law School, served as an adviser to the Iraqi Governing Council when it was drafting an interim constitution for the post-Saddam Hussein state. He once notably testified before a U.S. Senate committee that efforts to keep sharia entirely out of Iraq's Constitution would probably guarantee that Iraq would have no constitution at all.

An-Na'im's credentials are equally impressive. A professor of law at Emory University, he was a prominent voice in the Islamic reform movement in his native Sudan until the growing political power of religious fundamentalists forced him out of the country in 1985. At Emory and in his earlier work at Human Rights Watch, An-Na'im has devoted himself to reviving and advancing methods of interpreting sharia to reveal what he believes is its basic consistency with international standards of human rights....

An-Na'im's book goes more deeply into the meaning of sharia than does Feldman's. And even though Feldman's book has a different focus, its somewhat cursory treatment of the question raises concerns about his thoughts on the desirability and even the possibility of Islamic states. Na'im's closer examination strengthens his argument that in our times, secular states—and certainly not Islamic states—provide the only political conditions under which Muslims can truly live in accordance with sharia.

[Read the rest, in USNews.]

Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act

Congress just passed the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act.  The vote was unanimous in the Senate, and 414 to 1 in the House.  It will make most forms of discrimination based on genetic testing illegal.  Except, of course, killing based on prenatal diagnosis of genetic conditions.....   Some things about this world in which we live just make no sense to me.

Quote of the year

Some blog posts write themselves.  Today's paper carries another article about our dean's decision not to allow students to satisfy the public service graduation requirements by volunteering at Planned Parenthood.  A priceless excerpt:

"It's discouraging," Planned Parenthood spokeswoman Kathi Di Nicola said of Mengler's decision. "We're a front-line health-care provider for those on the margins of life."

The Huge Number of Americans in Prison, Revisited

Another informative, illuminating post by Bill Stuntz, here.

Religion in Politics, Revisited (for the Umpteenth Time)

A progressive evangelical movement?

posted by Rebecca Sager

“There is a thirst for two things in this country - a thirst for spirituality and a thirst for social justice”.
– Jim Wallis (2008)

When people hear the words “progressive” and “evangelical” together, a sort of cognitive dissonance occurs. Meshing the notions of Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson with ideas of social justice is not something most people easily understand. For the people inside this new movement, however, being an evangelical and progressive is a natural fit.

This spring I went to a fundraiser for Tom Periello, a Democratic candidate for Congress in Virginia. The small crowd was generally young and professional, and after talking to them it was clear that this was not just about raising money, it was about changing the dynamic between religion and politics and creating a new progressive religious movement. In the crowd were movement activists including members and employees of Sojourners, Common Good Strategies (CGS), and Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good (CACG), all organizations that are part of a new social movement that is aligning Catholics, evangelicals, and other Christians.

Members of this progressive religious movement see their work as fundamentally different from other conservative religious activists. As one founding member told me “How can you be a Christian and not care about issues like poverty and health care?” Like the others I spoke with, he told me the 2004 election was a turning point and call to action, expressing concern for social justice, a hope for something better in 2008, and an affirmation that faith has a new voice in politics.

[Rread the rest of this interesting post, at The Immanent Frame.]

Defending my "groan"

Rob adds his thoughts, and thereby fills out the picture, of the Kent School District case.  He writes:  "[T]he legitimate pedagogical objectives of a high school are much different than a university.  A university is, or at least should be, a broad and vibrant marketplace of competing moral claims.  I'm not sure that model is appropriate for a high school."  I agree.  He asks, "[b]ut even if we disagree with the school's decision not to approve Truth given its exclusion of non-Christians from voting membership, do we really want to give Truth a constitutional right to demand that it be approved?"  Maybe not.  I did not say that we do.

My frustration was focused, and was directed at least as much at the District as at the Ninth Circuit:  Even if we factor in Rob's "official approval" point, my own claim is that it is not "discrimination" -- at least, it is not "discrimination" in the sense that gives normative heft to anti-"discrimination" laws -- for a Christian club to limit membership to Christians.   And, I see no reason -- even if we understand the mission of a high school in the way Rob suggests -- for a public high school in a liberal (properly understood) society to have any qualms about providing "equal access" (as the law requires) to "Christian" clubs that are for "Christians."  Such clubs are doing doing nothing wrong, nothing illiberal, nothing that they should be ashamed of, and nothing that a public school should worry about endorsing, when they construct their membership in accord with their identities.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Defending the Ninth Circuit

I'm not quite ready to share Rick's "groan" in response to the Ninth Circuit's ruling in Truth v. Kent School District.  I find maddening a university's decision not to approve Christian student groups that "discriminate" against non-Christians, but this case involves a high school.  And this is not a Good News Club-type case in which a Christian group is denied access to public facilities; here the "Truth" Christian group sought status as an officially approved curricular group, which would allow them to use student council funds and access the PA system for making announcements, among other privileges.

More fundamentally, though, I think the legitimate pedagogical objectives of a high school are much different than a university.  A university is, or at least should be, a broad and vibrant marketplace of competing moral claims.  I'm not sure that model is appropriate for a high school.  In this case, the school district's policies portrayed officially approved student groups (as opposed to clubs like Young Life that meet before or after school) as vehicles by which to teach tolerance and inclusiveness (among other values).  This is not to suggest that all officially approved groups were uncontroversial -- the Gay-Straight Student Alliance gained approval, which makes the Christian group's exclusion a bit jarring, I'll admit.  But even if we disagree with the school's decision not to approve Truth given its exclusion of non-Christians from voting membership, do we really want to give Truth a constitutional right to demand that it be approved? 

As Rick himself recently wrote in a very thoughtful essay, it is by no means obvious how we should expect the First Amendment, which is designed to “constrain the government from interfering in or directing a diverse and pluralistic society’s conversations about the common good,” to apply in a context in which the state is charged with “producing not just certain facilities, but certain core values, loyalties, and commitments." 

Put simply, I'm always willing to groan at the Ninth Circuit, but I need a bit more convincing in this case.

Reno on the death penalty

Rusty Reno has some interesting thoughts on capital punishment, and the Court's recent lethal-injection decision, here, at the First Things blog.  A taste:

We live in complicated times, and I’ll admit that I have found it reassuring that American voters have resisted the sirens of moral relativism, soft-headed liberalism, and rhetorical simplifications. The popularity of the death penalty is not a function of primitive desires for revenge that overtake beer-drinking guys with guns in their pickups. Support for capital punishment is not a sign of a latent lust for violence in American society. It no more reflects a culture of death than does the Book of Deuteronomy. On the contrary, persistent support stems from a collective confidence that some acts are deeply wicked, and that as a society we need to respond with the firmest possible “NO!”

I share the sentiment. I think any person with a sense of our collective responsibility to moral truth should. But I also worry that times have changed. In his First Things essay “Christians and the Death Penalty,” Joseph Bottum meditated on our modern political condition. As he observed, the secular state is not vested with the same divine purpose as the older sovereignty of Christian kings. In fact, one feature of our American consciousness is the conviction that the older view of sovereignty was overinflated and dangerously sacred in its self-image. If this is so, then perhaps we wrongly look to the courtroom and prison and other instruments of the state for fullest expression of our shared moral vision. The expectation is especially suspect when it comes to what Bottum calls “high justice” of a properly authorized and painstakingly orchestrated execution on behalf of justice.

To a great extent, the American experiment in limited, secular sovereignty has won out in the West. After their bloody modern experiments in the deification of the nation-state, Europeans societies have embraced a much more modest view of the moral and spiritual role of their governments. Not coincidentally, they have also taken away from government the power to inflict the death penalty. The Bible consistently teaches that God alone has the power of life and death. Human authorities rightly possess that power only as authorized by God himself. Thus, to abolish the death penalty sends a clear message: The secular state has no avenue to divine authorization. Given the history of Europe and the countless dead bodies piled up by governments self-ordained to serve the various modern gods—the People, History, the Master Race, and the Workers—it seems to me that the European abolition of the death penalty has been extremely prudent. As John Paul II knew only too well, the modern ideological state serves strange and bloodthirsty gods, and is easily tempted to use death as a means to assault and destroy society.

Perhaps because we inherited an Anglo-Saxon system for constraining governmental power, America has seen many unjust social policies, some with lethal consequences, but never political prisoners marched to the gallows for mass execution. This goes a long way, I think, toward explaining our singularity. Europeans view our loyalty to capital punishment as barbaric, but, in truth, we retain the death penalty in large part because we have no rich history of barbarism to give us a sober sense of the need to remove the sacred power of the sword from the hands of the secular state.

Prudence is easy after the fact, but the wise seek to avoid evils before they overwhelm us. We would do well to give some collective thought to our present situation. Global terrorism now requires the already powerful security apparatus of Western governments to extend their reach. Today, closed-circuit TV puts the city of London under constant observation. American intelligence services monitor global Internet traffic, and secret operations now seem to be a matter of course. In these and many other ways, our government and the governments of our allies project power ever more deeply into the fabric of our lives.

This expansion of state power is necessary. Those we elect must do exactly what John Paul II identifies as the bottom-line responsibility of civil authority: defend society. But we also need to exercise caution. These days our government seems compelled to operate secret prisons in various places around the globe and to hold prisoners without trial. Such policies, however justified, however temporary, however rightly criticized by Congress and duly corrected by the courts, cannot help but remind us of methods once used by the Nazis and the Soviets. It’s a chilling thought, especially since we continue to vest our government with the power to execute. Therefore, in these perilous times a prudent citizen should seek the abolition of the death penalty. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

Reactions?

Floridians will have chance to reject Blaine and help kids.

If you care about religious freedom and educational opportunity, move to Florida, quickly, and vote (only if it's legal, of course):

With a hallmark piece of tax reform safely on the ballot, opposition melted Friday against a proposal to enshrine in the state Constitution a protection for private-school vouchers.

The Taxation and Budget Reform Commisison voted 19-6 to give voters a chance in November to undo a 2006 court ruling that struck down a school voucher program. The citizen panel meets every 20 years and has the power to put amendments directly on the ballot.

The amendment, if approved, would reverse a Florida Supreme Court decision that threw out the state's voucher program for students in poorly performing schools. The amendment would give the Legislature the power to use state money to pay for students to attend programs deemed ``alternatives to the public school system.''

The commission's vote Friday followed a hard-fought debate on Thursday when it agreed to place a major tax reform before voters: asking them to eliminate property taxes that pay for schools and force the Legislature to expand and raise sales taxes to replace those taxes.

This will be the second amendment on the ballot designed to reverse the court ruling. The panel already approved an amendment that would remove the constitutional ban on using taxpayer money for religious-based or church-run schools and institutions.

More here, from the Miami Herald.