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.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Colson on Carhart and the Court's Catholics

Charles Colson -- an (obviously) prominent Evangelical and, among other things, the inspiration for the Prison Fellowship -- released this statement, after several critics of the Court's recent partial-birth abortion ban attributed the Catholic Justices votes to uphold the ban to, well, their Catholicism.  Here's a bit:

If you uphold a law approved by both parties in Congress and supported by most Americans, you are imposing your morality. But if you vote against the ban, you have nobly kept your religious views from interfering with your job. The ugly implication here is obvious: that it is not possible for faithful Catholic judges to carry out their responsibility to interpret and uphold the law. . . .

Protestants have a special duty to condemn anti-Catholic bigotry. Shamefully, at one time many Protestants accepted the vile teachings of Paul Blanchard, author of American Freedom and Catholic Power. They supported the anti-Catholic agenda of the group for which he was general counsel: Americans United for Separation of Church and State. Our Catholic brethren should not have to wait to hear our voices forcefully raised against the bigotry now directed against them.

Interesting times.

"Church, State, and the Practice of Love"

I've put up on SSRN a version of the paper I presented at Villanova last fall (and which is now out in the Villanova Law Review) at the (wonderful) Scarpa Conference.  The paper is called "Church, State, and the Practice of Love."  Here's the abstract:

In his first encyclical letter, Deus caritas est, Pope Benedict XVI describes the Church as a “community of love.” In this letter, he explores the “organized practice” love by and through the Church, and the relationship between this practice, on the one hand, and the Church's “commitment to the just ordering of the State and society,” on the other. “God is love,” he writes. This paper considers the implications of this fact for the inescapably complicated nexus of church-state relations in our constitutional order.

The specific goal for this paper is to draw from Deus caritas est some insight into what is a fundamental and – at present – the most pressing challenge in church-state law, namely, the preservation of the Church's moral and legal right to govern herself in accord with her own norms and in response to her own calling. It asks, what does the new Pope's work and thinking, about the future and present state of the Church and her organized practice of love, suggest about the appropriate content and vulnerable state of the rights and independence of religious groups – and of the freedom of the Church?

You can download the paper here.

Bishop Burke v. Sheryl Crow

Colleen Carroll Campbell has an interesting essay at NRO online about the criticism of Bishop Burke's resignation from the foundation board of the Catholic children's hospital in St. Louis in reaction to their decision to feature Sheryl Crow (a very public advocate for abortion rights and embryonic stem cell research) at a fundraiser.  Her closing paragraphs:

Many religious leaders have learned that they receive more flattering press if they focus their political pronouncements on the fight against poverty or global warming and avoid issues like abortion. Burke surely learned this lesson. The same critics who loudly told him to stay out of politics in 2004, when he criticized Sen. John Kerry’s views on abortion, voiced no such concern in 2005, when he protested Missouri’s Medicaid cuts.

Today’s religious leaders increasingly face a double standard when it comes to their public pronouncements: They can say what they want as long as they express politically correct views or stay mum on hot-button social issues. Where secular pundits and celebrities are given free reign to plead their case to the public, religious leaders are derided as theocrats for injecting religiously derived moral principles into political debates. This stifling of religious voices is intended to prevent religious conflicts in the public square. But it also prevents the most fundamental form of deliberation necessary to the functioning of a pluralistic democracy: honest debates about right and wrong, good and evil, truth and falsehood.

Burke’s resignation from the foundation board clarified how seriously the Catholic Church takes its teaching about the sanctity of human life from its earliest stages. That teaching may not be popular or politically correct, but Burke has the right to defend it. To vilify him for speaking out because he wears a bishop’s mitre is the epitome of religious intolerance. Such intolerance should frighten religious believers and free-speech defenders of all political persuasions.

Catholic Justices and the Death Penalty

I appreciate very much Eduardo's recent post -- following up on our earlier not-quite-serious exchange -- about Catholic Justices in death-penalty cases.  I am open to his argument that "general immorality of the death penalty imposes some obligations on someone in a position of authority with the discretion to act accordingly."  That said, I remain leery of suggestions -- and I am not saying Eduardo is suggesting -- that (a) because the death penalty is immoral, it follows that (b) in order to judge morally, a Catholic appellate judge needs to sustain (all) legal claims brought by inmates on death row.  This leeriness is not, I think, inconsistent with my view that, in order to legislate morally, a Catholic legislator must resist expanding, and must try to reasonable regulate, the Court-created abortion right.

News from Ireland about Abortion

MOJ-friend Gerry Whyte writes:  "The abortion issue has raised its head again here in Ireland. Yesterday a 17 year old girl in the care of the State applied to the High Court for permission to travel to the UK to terminate her pregnancy, having recently discovered that her foetus suffers from anencephaly and will not survive for more than 2-3 days after birth."  Here is a brief news report from RTE, dated May 1:

The High Court is due to hear on Thursday a challenge by a 17-year-old girl against a Health Service Executive decision to stop her leaving the State for an abortion.  The 17-year-old, who has been told that her child cannot survive outside the womb, has been in the care of the HSE since February.  Known as Ms D, she is four months pregnant and wants to travel to the UK for a termination.  The decision was made when the teenager discovered the baby she is carrying is suffering from a condition which is causing its brain not to develop properly. She has been told that the child will only live a very short time, if at all, after its born.  The HSE is refusing to allow her to leave the country.  MS D is challenging the court order placing her in care, in so far as it restricts her leaving the State.  She is also asking the High Court to overrule the HSE's decision to ask gardaí to stop her.  And she is challenging the HSE's decision to refuse to let her travel to terminate the pregnancy unless there was a risk she would commit suicide.

Lawyers for the 17-year-old girl told the High Court today it was of great importance this case be heard as speedily as possible.  Gerard Durkan, senior counsel for the HSE, said the HSE was anxious that whatever course of action best secured the girl's welfare should be taken, having regard to legal constraints.  Donal O'Donnell, senior counsel for the Attorney General said it was the AG's position that the HSE had no power to direct the gardaí to restrain someone who is the subject of a care order from travelling abroad.  He said gardaí did not have the power to stop someone travelling simply because they were the subject of a care order and he said it was the AG's position that the district court order relating to Ms D did not stop her travelling anywhere.  In response to a request from the HSE to have the girl psychiatrically examined, the court was told that she was not suicidal.  She had said it 'would kill her' to go through with the pregnancy but she said this meant that it would be hugely difficult for her.

A full hearing of the case will take place on Thursday.

Should we want the law to ban abortions in cases like this?  Why/why not?

Monday, April 30, 2007

Crisis at Ave Maria Law

Many MOJ contributors have had some sense of the evolving crisis at Ave Maria Law school. Below is a statement of the Association of Ave Maria Law Faculty, which group represents all but a tiny portion of that school's faculty, that provides a very full picture of the seriousness of that crisis.    -- Mark

What's going on at Ave Maria School of Law?

We have chosen to reply as a group to repeated inquiries concerning recent events at Ave Maria School of Law (AMSL). We do so to indicate the extent of our agreement concerning the serious nature of the crisis unfolding here, the need for fundamental change if AMSL is to continue to exist and serve its Mission, and to appeal for input from our colleagues in the wider legal academy.

Until now, the majority of the faculty has not made public the outrageous behavior of the Law School's administration. We have remained silent in the hope of minimizing damage to our school, believing that responsible parties would set matters right, and out of fear of escalating acts of retaliation. At this point, however, we believe it is important to allow the larger legal community to know the reality of the way AMSL's administration has abused the power with which it has been entrusted.

Those who have not been closely following events at AMSL, nonetheless, may have heard of a number of events over the last year or so. To summarize: last spring, a substantial majority of the faculty issued a vote of "no confidence" in Dean Bernard Dobranski. The response from the AMSL Board of Governors, led by Board Chairman and AMSL's largest funder, Thomas Monaghan, was a terse restatement of its support for the Dean. This rejection of open discussions, combined with retaliatory actions by the Dean, exclusion of the faculty from governance of the school, and serious violations of academic freedom were subjects of an investigation by an ABAfact-finder earlier this year. In the midst of this ABAprocess, the AMSL Board voted in effect to close AMSL and transfer its assets to a new law school to be located on the campus of Ave Maria University, in southwest Florida.

Disagreement over this proposed move is thus only one aspect of the difficulties at AMSL. Problems at AMSL go much deeper, and are much more structural.  Since the vote of "no confidence" in Dean Dobranski in April 2006 over issues of faculty governance and academic freedom, he has used threats and retaliation to try to silence members of the faculty from voicing concerns about his leadership and that of Mr. Monaghan. A majority of the faculty whom the Dean believes to be disloyal to him have been punished financially and through manipulation of the promotion and tenure system. One tenured faculty member has been repeatedly threatened with termination based upon bizarre allegations. Junior faculty members have been threatened that their careers would be harmed if they associate with disfavored tenured faculty. We have also been informed that Dean Dobranski had instituted a system of monitoring our emails and computers, and student research assistants have been closely questioned about research projects of disfavored faculty members. All tenured faculty members have been removed from the Chairs of faculty committees, and such chairs are now in the control of the few faculty members whom the Dean believes to be loyal to him. Cumulatively, such intimidation and bullying has created an intolerable atmosphere of fear and contempt at our school.

We repost here, as an example of this atmosphere, a portion of an email by AMSL's President and Dean Bernard Dobranski to the faculty sent on Wednesday, March 14 - eight days before the school was visited by an ABA fact-finder investigating complaints regarding the manner in which AMSL is being run.

The full memo is available on a web site established as a repository of documents related to the various educational enterprises run by Mr. Monaghan [html; PDF]. Here is an excerpt:

Ave Maria School of Law resources, including the Law School email, may not be used ... for any ... activities or purposes that are intended to or are reasonably likely to undermine or damage, tangibly or intangibly, the successful operations of our Law School. These limitations do not apply to activities conducted by a faculty member on his or her own time and using his or her own resources. These limitations, however, do not imply any permission to engage in activities injurious to the Law School, which activities, of course, are impermissible for any employee, regardless of the equipment used or location of the activity. Moreover, these limitations do not interfere with a faculty member's legitimate right to interact with the American Bar Association in any way, nor do they interfere with any other legitimate activities of and expressions by faculty members, consistent with the concepts of "The Centrality of the Mission" and "The Definition and Role of Academic Freedom" as set forth in the Faculty Handbook.

If any faculty member is considering using Law School resources in such a way as might be contrary to the limitations described here, he or she should fully advise me or Dean Milhizer in writing of the contemplated use and we will notify the faculty member in writing whether the contemplated use is prohibited.


We find this memo, in the context of current events, to be breathtaking in its audacity. The Dean of a (currently) ABA accredited law school is threatening to fire faculty whom he finds, in his own opinion, to be acting in any way he thinks might possibly cause harm to AMSL. He also appears to be demanding that faculty get prior approval for use of AMSL resources, thereby imposing prior restraint on their speech and conduct. Such threats (which were reiterated in a memo to all system distribution and alumni [html; PDF]) would be chilling in any atmosphere, let alone that at AMSL, which is under ABA investigation, and where the Dean already has had a vote of "no-confidence" registered against him by a substantial majority of the faculty.

In light of this conduct, a substantial majority of the faculty of AMSL has no plans to participate in relocating our beloved school to Ave Maria Town in Southwest Florida. No evidence has been presented that would suggest that the move, which was recently approved by our Board of Governors, is in the best interest of AMSL.  Indeed, it appears that the move is being pursued primarily to benefit Ave Maria University, an institution that is wholly unrelated to the Law School.

Prior to the Board of Governors’ vote to "relocate" the school, a substantial majority of the faculty, having been denied repeated requests for both a written relocation proposal and a meaningful opportunity to comment as a group on the wisdom of this move, sent a resolution to the Board opposing the proposed move and explaining that opposition [PDF]. There are all sorts of reasons why one would find it imprudent to leave a well-populated area, where a law school has made valuable contacts with the profession and for its students over the last seven years, to move 1,300 miles to a new and untested community, isolated from most of the kinds of social networks in which legal communities thrive. The resolution pointed out many of these concerns in a detailed response [PDF] to the administration's feasibility study regarding the move [PDF 5.3MB]. Given the recent track record of the poor governance of AMSL under the current administration, and given that the same governing authority will exercise an even greater range of influence - directly or indirectly - over all of Ave Maria Town, we cannot subject our institution, ourselves, and our families to the whim of that authority over the entire community: university, housing, shops, town, public services, children's schools, and Oratory.

In fact, no more than a handful of faculty members will be moving to Florida.  In combination with other challenges facing Ave Maria University [overview], it is our opinion, based upon the information made available to us and the opinions of knowledgeable persons whom we have consulted, that the ABAwill not acquiesce to the move. If AMSL moves without such acquiescence, it stands to lose its most valuable asset, its ABA accreditation.

The fear is growing that Dean Dobranski and Mr. Monaghan now intend to abandon our school, whether or not a new one eventually will arise in Florida. Indeed, at a recent meeting with AMSL students, the Dean stated that the administration has no contingency plan in the event that the ABA refuses to acquiesce in the move, and that two Board members believe that AMSL is a "failed experiment."

This "spin" on events unfortunately is not unexpected. Mr. Monaghan has already abandoned and destroyed two colleges (Ave Maria College in Michigan  and Orchard Lake Saint Mary's College, also in Michigan). So it is sadly unsurprising that he is behaving in this manner. More disappointing is Dean Dobranski's conduct, refusing even to meet with his own faculty to discuss issues of governance and the move - insisting, in effect, that they are none of the faculty's business. Most disappointing is the conduct of the Board, which has (or had) among its members two cardinals and four prominent Catholic professors.

Acting as if the move to Florida is a fait accompli before acquiescence has been granted, and failing to have a contingency plan should it be denied, is reckless. In view of this failure, faculty members have investigated options for maintaining a program of sound Catholic legal education in Ann Arbor, and have uncovered several promising avenues. We ask for support for these efforts in the near future from our colleagues around the country.

What is more, in our view calling a living community of hundreds of human persons a "failed experiment" reveals a remarkable disregard for basic Christian values. Furthermore, the charge of failure is demonstrably false. On the contrary, as our high bar passage rate and judicial clerkship numbers demonstrate, our school actually is a phenomenal success. The only failure has been the Board's inexcusable failure to provide leadership in the face of the current crisis.

As evidenced by a number of documents available on the internet [link], as well as by some rather angry, though sometimes humorous blogs [link], and by the experience and general mood and convictions of faculty and students, AMSL is engulfed in an atmosphere of fear - fear for one's job, and for one's future should one cross an administration that has shown itself determined to squelch all dissent. Faculty members, both tenured and tenure-track, have been threatened with termination. The Dean has pocketed ballots and stalked out of faculty meetings unilaterally declaring them adjourned.

Although the faculty has maintained confidentiality regarding all the specific reasons for the vote of no-confidence in Dean Dobranski, one thing not confidential is the reaction of the Board of Governors to a detailed list of the Dean's abuses: a bald reiteration of complete confidence in Dean Dobranski, followed by a year long refusal to have any substantive discussions with the faculty regarding issues of academic freedom and faculty governance. The Board also has refused repeated requests for intervention to see that the faculty's views are taken into account in regard to the decision to close down the school and transfer its assets to Florida.

We ask our colleagues at Mirror of Justice and elsewhere whether it is in keeping with Catholic Social Teaching - or even with basic standards of human decency - for a Board of Governors to simply ignore the faculty's detailed allegations of the denial of appropriate faculty governance and academic freedom? Are threats to people's jobs, should they dare speak out against a major change that may (indeed most likely will) bring ruin to the school, acceptable? What do conditions at AMSL tell us about Catholic legal education - especially if, as appears the case, Catholic law faculty from other institutions who serve on our Board of Governors are willing to let the school be destroyed in this manner? Finally, of course, we would ask for prayers and advice on how best to deal with this deplorable situation.

In Christ,

The Association of Ave Maria Faculty

Catholic Justices and the Death Penalty

Rick says:

I disagree with Eduardo (as I suggested, in response to Michael, here and here) that there is "authoritative church teaching" on the question whether a federal judge reviewing a state court's denial, on procedural grounds in state postconviction proceedings, of a death-row inmate's Penry II claim is required to vote to reverse that denial.

Of course, I was mostly joking. On the other hand, how's this for a defense of my argument:

Given the immorality of the death penalty in all but exceptional cases (what I take to be the authoritative teaching of the Church) and given an American death penalty that goes substantially beyond what the Church would allow, it seems to me that Catholic Justices are under at least some moral obligations with respect to the death penalty.

It may be that Catholic justices are under (moral) obligations akin to civil disobedience.  This could mean the sort of Brennan/Marshall dissenting from all applications of the death penalty.  Or, alternatively, if you think their role-based obligations as justices to "The Law"  trump their moral obligations, perhaps they are under an obligation to resign so as not to participate in the machinery of death put into place by the law.   I'm reminded of this passage from Evangelium Vitae:

Sometimes the choices which have to be made are difficult; they may require the sacrifice of prestigious professional positions or the relinquishing of reasonable hopes of career advancement. In other cases, it can happen that carrying out certain actions, which are provided for by legislation that overall is unjust, but which in themselves are indifferent, or even positive, can serve to protect human lives under threat.

The first sentence seems to me to point towards withdrawal from positions of power and prestige in favor of one's moral obligations towards human life.  But that last sentence suggests a third possibility:  If there is a plausible legal position according to which "a federal judge reviewing a state court's denial, on procedural grounds in state postconviction proceedings, of a death-row inmate's Penry II claim" could vote to grant habeas (an assumption that I think may be warranted in this case by the fact that five justices in fact voted to grant such relief), while still being technically correct in a legal sense, then I do not think that it is utterly implausible to suggest that a judge (Catholic or otherwise, although we're talking about Catholic judges) has a (moral) obligation -- rooted in the immorality of the death penalty (an immorality affirmed by the authoritative teachings of the Church) -- to do adopt that position. 

Perhaps even this last possibility is too strong.  I'm not deeply committed to it -- I'll admit that it's a very complicated issue that I need to think about much, much more carefully.  But I did want to expand on the issue a little bit in response to your facetious reply to my facetious post (not that my post deserved much better).  In short, I was not saying (even jokingly) that the Church has a position on the narrow legal question, but I did mean to suggest that the general immorality of the death penalty imposes some obligations on someone in a position of authority with the discretion to act accordingly. 

   

Evangelical Theologian of "Ancient-Future Faith" Dies

There are many reasons why the divide between evangelicalism and Catholicism and other liturgical forms of Christianity has narrowed recently.  But one of them is the work of Robert Webber, emeritus Wheaton College theologian who traveled the road from a Bob Jones University undergraduate education to writing a series of books commending to evangelicals the patristic tradition and the "ancient-future faith."  Webber died on Friday.  R.I.P.

Tom

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Lethal injections

The Boston Globe editorializes today about new studies on lethal-injection procedures.  Here's a bit:

The debate over the death penalty in America should not hinge on whether the final agonies caused by any particular execution method are unconstitutionally painful. There are many other reasons why the death penalty should be abolished: It does not deter crime; it is applied unevenly across jurisdictions and demographic groups; it is irrevocable, and the dozen-odd death row inmates exonerated by DNA evidence underscore the danger of executing the innocent.

"Too much civil society"?

One theme that runs through conversations about Catholic legal and political theory involves the importance of "mediating institutions" and civil society.  So, this Weekly Standard piece, by Gerard Alexander, "The Nonprofit Industrial Complex:  Is there such a thing as too much civil society?", might provide a good occasion for reflection:  What, exactly, do we want non-state institutions to do, and to look like?