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, August 24, 2012

Matthew O'Brien on Rawlsian "Political Liberalism" and "Same-Sex Marriage"

Do Rawlsian principles of "political liberalism" demand the legal recognition of same-sex romantic partnerhips as marriages?  I suspect that many of Rawls's conservative critics, as well as his liberal supporters, would suppose that the answer must be yes.  (For the conservative critics, that would be one more count against Rawls's general theory of justice and political morality.)  But now comes my former student, Matthew O'Brien, who in a brilliant article just out in the British Journal of American Legal Studies argues that the answer is actually no.  In fact, he maintains that Rawlsian principles, rigorously and consistently applied, forbid the re-definition of civil marriage to include same-sex partnerships.  The article, entitled "Why Liberal Neutrality Prohibits Same-Sex Marriage:  Rawls, Political Liberalism, and the Family," is available on line here:  http://villanova.academia.edu/MatthewOBrien/Papers/1536325/Why_Liberal_Neutrality_Prohibits_Same-Sex_Marriage_Rawls_Political_Liberalism_and_the_Family

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Troy (State) University Dorm and Newman Center

In the vein of "the moral state of campus culture" ... Troy University, a state institution in Alabama, announces:

Construction of a new 376-bed residence hall at Troy University is under way, adding much-needed student housing, with a values-oriented twist.

In collaboration with St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church in Troy and the Archdiocese of Mobile, the residence hall will feature a Newman Center, a Catholic ministry center found on secular university campuses throughout the world and on more than 270 campuses in the United States. . . .

While housing in the residence hall will be open to all University students, Catholic students, as well as students of faith, may take part in Newman Center activities and attend events in a 2,300 square-foot chapel that will be the centerpiece of the development.

I'm sympathetic to the idea of creating such a space as a concrete (!) instantiation of faith-based values as an option for students.  I hope everyone concerned is taking the necessary steps to structure the arrangement to avoid any serious Establishment Clause challenges.  The university's news release says: "Troy University Foundation is building the facility, with financing provided by Troy Bank and Trust. Once constructed, trustees approved a measure that allows the University to lease the facility from the Foundation, a private entity, for its management and maintenance."  I can't tell for sure from the release whether (1) the chapel is a Catholic chapel, or the sort of general chapel found at many public universities, and (2) to what extent the "management and maintenance" by the university (I think the release says it's by the university) extends to the Newman Center and/or the chapel.

Nathan Harden on campus culture at Yale (and beyond)

Nathan Harden's new book "Sex and God at Yale" will be of interest to anyone who is concerned about the moral state of campus culture at colleges and universities in the US.  Here's my dust jacket endorsement:

“The ideology of sexual liberation that is the lasting legacy of ‘Me generation’ liberalism and its imbecilic doctrine of ‘if it feels good do it,’ has hardened into an orthodoxy on college campuses around the country. Not only is it uncritically embraced by many students, it is supported by a great many faculty members and abetted and even promoted in a variety of ways by academic administrators. In the spirit of the late William F. Buckley, Nathan Harden takes a hard, critical look at the prevalent sexual liberationist dogmas at Yale, exploring their damaging effects on the educational enterprise and their often tragic consequences in the lives of students.”  — Robert P. George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence, Princeton University

Nathan Harden is a recent Yale graduate. His critique of the practices and policies of that university would apply with equal force to many other institutions, including major Catholic ones.  Can anything be done about the situation, or are decency and honor in sexual matters a lost cause for our young people?  Keep hope alive!  Get to know---and support---the Love and Fidelity Network: http://www.loveandfidelity.org/

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

The Problem of Deep Retribution and Rehabilitation

Prompted by an inquiry from Rick, I took a look again at Jeffrie Murphy's wonderful book, Getting Even: Forgiveness and Its Limits (2003), about which I've written a little before.  Chapter Nine, entitled "Christianity and Criminal Punishment," contains the following interesting passage about the relationship of Christianity and retribution.  But I think it also says something useful about rehabilitation.

But what about retribution?  Is it a legitimate objective on a Christian view of punishment? . . . . This depends, I think, on just what one means by "retribution."  In the philosophical literature on punishment, retributive punishment is usually understood as giving the criminal what he, in justice, deserves.  There are, however, at least six different accounts of what might be meant by "desert" and thus at least six different versions of retributivism: desert as legal guilt; desert as involving mens rea (e.g., intention, knowledge); desert as involving responsibility (capacity to conform one's conduct to the rules); desert as a debt owed to annul wrongful gains from unfair free riding (a view developed by Herbert Morris); desert as what the wrongdoer owes to vindicate the social worth of the victim (a view developed by Jean Hampton); and, finally, desert as involving ultimate character -- evil or wickedness in some deep sense (a view that Kant calls "inner viciousness") . . . .

It seems to me that there is no inconsistency between the essentials of Christianity and the first five forms of retribution noted.  With respect to the sixth, however -- what I will call "deep character retributivism" -- there does seem to me to be an inconsistency . . . . I have earlier argued that judging the very soul of another human being and attempting to decide his ultimate desert is beyond the scope of human ability and must be viewed as a task either to be left undone or reserved for God.  Human beings simply do not know enough to make such judgments with accuracy.  In addition, human beings are simply not good enough to make such judgments without hypocrisy . . . . [T]his problem grows in seriousness the greater the depth of inquiry into the inner life -- for example, I suspect that judgments of intention (and other mens rea judgments) are more reliable and safer than judgments of inner viciousness, judgments that a person is hopelessly rotten to the core.  They are safer because they do not to the same degree tempt us to cruelty and to dismissing the very human worth of the wrongdoer.

The passage is a very nice reflection on a species of "deep" retributivism that Murphy finds problematic for Christianity, but it seems to me that the nature of the critique might also pose similar challenges to a "deep" species of rehabilitation.  One of the underappreciated qualities that unites retributivism and rehabilitation (again, on certain accounts of each of these functions of punishment) is confidence in the state's capacity to conduct fairly thoroughgoing characterological inquiries, and then to act on those inquiries accordingly.  This is not a quality shared by deterrence, general or specific, which depends much less (if at all) on deep character inquiry.  The reasons for action in response to the inquiries differ, of course, but retribution and rehabilitation both depend to some extent on that basic sort of inquiry into human character -- the one in order to mete out (ultimate) justice, the other to bring about (ultimate) transformation.  But if we do not know enough and are not good enough to pursue these "deep" inquiries for retributivist ends, then it seems to me that we should likewise be skeptical about our parallel capacities to pursue rehabilitative ends. 

Mark Movsesian on "The Paradox of Catholic Social Thought"

My friend Prof. Mark Movsesian (St. John's) writes at the CLR Forum, responding to this excellent piece by Fr. Barron -- on the "paradox of Catholic Social Thought."  Check it out.

Barron's piece concludes with this:

In his wonderful Orthodoxy, written over a hundred years ago but still remarkably relevant today, G.K. Chesterton said that Catholicism is marked  through and through by the great both/and principle. Jesus is both divine and human. He is not one or the other; nor is he some bland mixture of the two; rather, he is emphatically one and emphatically the other. In a similar way, the Church is radically devoted to this world and radically devoted to the world to come. In the celibacy of its priests, it is totally against having children, and in the fruitful marriage of its lay people, it is totally for having children.

In its social teaching, this same sort of "bi-polar extremism" is on display. Solidarity? The Church is all for it. Subsidiarity? The Church couldn't be more enthusiastic about it. Not one or the other, nor some bland compromise between the two, but both, advocated with equal vigor. I think it would be wise for everyone to keep this peculiarly Catholic balance in mind as the debate over Paul Ryan's policies unfolds.

And, Movsesian's with this:

Christianity always asks the believer to accept seemingly incompatible assertions: Christ is at once God and Man; the world is at once good and evil; the Christian must at once care for the world and focus on eternity. For non-Christians, these are nonsensical pairings; but for Christians, they help define the mystery of faith.  If there is to be a Catholic — or, more broadly, Christian –social theory, it must somehow endorse community and individuality, in Barron’s words, “with equal vigor.” It must embrace the paradox that Christians are called to be in the world but not of it — an undoable something that somehow must be done.

The coming pro-abortion spectacle in Charlotte

It looks like the Democratic Party's leadership has decided to make the Party's fierce commitment to protecting abortion against meaningful legal restrictions of any kind and extending its availablility a, if not the, central theme of its national convention:

http://washingtonexaminer.com/dem-convention-becomes-anti-akin-affair/article/2505601#.UDTrtEJibk0

I'll leave to the pundits the question whether this is good politics. (I suppose it's one way to avoid focusing on the state of the economy.) It is, however, a great sadness from the point of view of faithful Catholics and others who believe in the inherent and equal dignty and right to life of every member of the human family--from the child in the womb, to the mentally or physically handicapped individual, to the frail elderly person nearing death.  The Democratic Party could once boast that it was the party that "looked out for the little guy."  No more.  That will be clear when speaker after speaker at the podium proclaims abortion as a sacred right and virulently condemns those of us who stand up and speak out in defense of abortion's tiny victims.  I have pity for the dwindling band of pro-life Democrats who will sit in front of their television sets, or in the conventional hall itself, listening to the roars of approval as the presidents of Planned Parenthood and NARAL Pro-Choice America, among many others, deliver their carefully crafted applause lines.

The spectacle will, of course, reflect the position and strategy of the Obama-Biden ticket, and reinforce for those of us who are pro-life the points I made in 2008 in "Obama's Abortion Extremism" http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2008/10/133 and (with Yuval Levin) "Obama and Infanticide"  http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2008/10/282.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

A rabbi in Germany is prosecuted for performing circumcisions

The entire Catholic community---in Germany and throughout the world---must stand with Rabbi Goldberg and speak out against his prosecution for performing circumcisions of male infants in compliance with their parents' wishes and Jewish law.  The threats to religious liberties and to religious people whose beliefs and practices are regarded as intolerable by those who preach the supreme importance of tolerance know no borders.

http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/08/21/german-circumcision-ban-bags-first-victim-anti-semitism/

Inazu on the Contraceptive Mandate and McConnell on Inazu

MOJ-friend John Inazu (Washington U.) has a piece at USA Today about why the fight over the HHS mandate isn't merely a "Catholic thing" here. When you're finished with that, go over to the First Things site and read Mike McConnell's review of Inazu's book on freedom of assembly. Here's the conclusion to McConnell's review:

The title Liberty’s Refuge: The Forgotten Freedom of Assembly is therefore sad but all too true: Freedom of assembly has been forgotten. And unfortunately Inazu is right about another thing as well: It matters. America has long been distinguished by a vibrant and independent civil society, one possible only when voluntary associations can meet freely in public spaces and public institutions and when they can limit their membership and leadership to persons who share their beliefs. This means that groups will exist that we like and groups will exist that we do not like.

Under the Court’s current weak doctrine, governments can effectively pick and choose which groups are permitted to use public property, using pretexts like the “all-comers” rule or the policy against “worship.” The framers of the First Amendment thought they had guaranteed all associations the right to meet, with the sole limitation that they behave peaceably. That freedom has slipped away.

Challenge to the 9/11 Museum Cross

I hadn't spent much time looking at the issues raised in the latest round of the ever-present fight over public displays of religious symbols--this time, litigation brought by atheists against display of the construction beam cross on the grounds of the 9/11 Museum--until a CBS reporter asked me to comment (story here). As Johnny Buckles observes over at the Nonprofit Law Blog, there's a tricky question about the Museum's status--it's incorporated as a a private non-profit organization but receives the bulk of its funding from government sources (that doesn't strike me as a serious problem for state action purposes) and is located on Port Authority land (that's a closer call). But even if the Museum doesn't prevail in its argument that it should be deemed a private entity for Establishment Clause purposes, it might should win under Van Orden v. Perry's and Salazar v. Buono's (implied on account of the cases's procedural posture) view that display of a historically significant religious symbol does not constitute government endorsement of religion. MOJ reader thoughts?

Monday, August 20, 2012

Nussbaum on Catholic University Presidents

I was disappointed by this comment by Martha Nussbaum in an interview with the Boston Review. A few editorial remarks below:

DJ: You argue that Catholic universities that restrict their presidencies to priests (i.e., males) should lose their tax-exempt status, because there is a compelling state interest to open such positions to both sexes. But isn’t that a slippery slope? Don’t most religions have objectionable views about sexual equality?

MN: I was making a specific point about the logic of the Bob Jones v. U.S. case, which dealt with that university’s policy banning interracial dating. The Supreme Court held that to withdraw the university’s tax exemption did indeed impose a “substantial burden” on the group’s free exercise of religion, but was justified by a “compelling state interest” in not cooperating with and strengthening racism. The government was in effect giving Bob Jones a massive gift of money. The same is true today of Catholic universities, all of which (excepting Georgetown, which now has a lay president) have statutory prohibitions against a female candidate for president. By giving them a large gift, the government is cooperating with sexism. I think that refusing to give someone a gift is quite different from making their activities illegal, and nobody was proposing to do that in either case. Moreover, these were not just tendencies or social facts—after all, lots people of all religions prefer to date only people of the same race, as many studies show— we are talking in both cases about mandatory rules, official university policies. I think it’s fine to refuse to give someone a huge gift when they have such mandatory policies, so what I was saying was that if a case parallel to Bob Jones were brought concerning the Catholic universities and their presidencies, it ought to come out the same way. Or rather, it ought to have come out the same say—since of course the legal standard under which we currently operate is a slightly different and weaker one than the one that prevailed when Bob Jones was decided, so we don’t know how either case would come out today.

First, there's a misstatement or overstatement of fact. By my count, over 100 of the 240-some Catholic colleges and universities in the US were founded by and, in most cases, still have a governing relationship with communities of religious women, so not only didn't they have a "statutory prohibition[] against a female candidate for president," they prohibited male presidents for most of their history. Indeed, as I was thinking about the Catholic schools just in the immediate area near me in Philadelphia, Immaculata University, Chestnut Hill College, Rosemont College, Neumann University, and Cabrini College all have women presidents--five Catholic schools in a 20-mile radius.

I also disagree that the tax exemption for Catholic institutions is a "large gift" from the government. There's a thorny debate, of course, about how one should understand the effect of tax exemptions, but Walz v. Tax Commission, 397 U.S. 644, 675-76 (1970), suggests that tax exempt status shouldn't readily be considered a grant from the government:

The grant of a tax exemption is not sponsorship, since the government does not transfer part of its revenue to churches, but simply abstains from demanding that the church support the state. No one has ever suggested that tax exemption has converted libraries, art galleries, or hospitals into arms of the state or put employees "on the public payroll." There is no genuine nexus between tax exemption and establishment of religion....The exemption creates only a minimal and remote involvement between church and state, and far less than taxation of churches. It restricts the fiscal relationship between church and state, and tends to complement and reinforce the desired separation insulating each from the other.

Finally, the most important point is that Catholic colleges and universities are, at their core, religious institutions that should have the freedom to select their leadership based on religious considerations, including, for example, a preference for members of the sponsoring religious order--an aspect of religious freedom that is especially clear in light of Hosanna-Tabor v. EEOC. There may be good reasons for reconsidering that preference (and some schools already have), but such decisions should be made by Catholic institutions free from coercion by the hegemonic liberal state. Indeed, some of Professor Nussbaum's own work, including passages from this article defending Rawlsian political liberalism against perfectionist liberalism and from her 2008 book Liberty of Conscience, seems to acknowledge the importance of such liberal tolerance for institutional religious freedom.