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.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Liberty's Refuge

I highly recommend John Inazu's forthcoming book, Liberty's Refuge: The Forgotten Freedom of Assembly.  For those who can't wait for the book, John has generously posted the introduction.  It is a wonderful contribution to our understanding of the foundational issues that underlie many of our conversations on MoJ.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Second Annual John Courtney Murray Lecture

For those of you who may be in or near Chicago next Thursday, October 21, you may be interested in the following:

JCM america portrait 

 

 

Second Annual John Courtney Murray, S.J., University Chair Lecture

 

 

by Rev. Robert John Araujo, S.J., Loyola's John Courtney Murray, S.J. University Chair

Political debate in America today is often characterized by exchanges of loud or angry words. Reasoned discourse is often absent, and it seems an artifact relegated to the days of a nobler past. But should this be so? John Courtney Murray argued why reasoned and civil debate are essential to the American experiment and republican democracy. The meaning of his statement, "Civility dies with the death of dialogue," will be explored in detail.

5 PM · RSVP
312.915.7126

Philip H. Corboy Law Center · Power Rogers & Smith Ceremonial Courtroom · 10th Floor · 25 East Pearson Street · Chicago

October 21, 2010

 

RJA sj

More on Phelps and free speech

Following up on Steve S.'s post, from a few days ago, on the Phelps case:  Here is an essay by Hadley Arkes, posted at "Public Discourse", on the same case.  Arkes writes, among other things:

. . . The Chaplinsky case also had the advantage of building on a tradition of understanding in the law that “assaults” did not strictly require the laying on of hands. One could shoot and deliberately miss. One could hold an unloaded gun near the head of a victim and click the trigger. There was not that much discrimination between an act of that kind and threatening calls in the night, or letters of extortion—or a cross burned outside the home of a black family. People who knew the conventions in their own language would have no trouble telling the difference, say, between a burning cross and a burning shoe box. With this understanding, swastikas and burning crosses and blazing epithets could be understood as “assaults” as fully as rocks thrown at victims.

With Justice Harlan’s turn in the Cohen case, the judges would essentially remove from the notion of “fighting words” those words “which by their very utterance inflict injury.” The wrong would be narrowed to those words that were spoken in a face-to-face encounter, in a distinctly personal attack, and likely to trigger a violent reaction. That formula has proved inapt at every level. . . .

Sticking together

The amazing story of the Chilean miners is a powerful reminder of, among other things, the social nature of the human person, though that nature is too often concealed by the isolation of modern life.  I don't think it takes a crisis to bring this to the fore -- even in the simplified form of daily living that often happens on a vacation, I find myself drawing closer to those around me.  The trick, it seems, is maintaining that social orientation when the vacation is over, when we've been returned to the Earth's surface.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Grading School Choice

Ross Douthat comments, in this piece, about the must-see movie, "Waiting for Superman" and also about the much-commented-upon essay by Frederick Hess, "Does School Choice 'Work'".  Check it out.

I am, I confess, a big fan of choice-in-education.  (Ed.:  No kidding?)  However, as Douthat writes, (and as I argued here, and as Joseph Viteritti has been insisting for years),

school choice advocates need to make a case for greater competition that doesn’t depend on test scores alone. Maybe charter schools, merit pay and vouchers won’t instantly turn every American child into a test-acing dynamo. But if they “only” create a more cost-effective system that makes parents and students happier with their schools — well, that would be no small feat, and well worth fighting for.

As I wrote, in the linked-to-above piece:

I am confident that giving parents the ability to exercise meaningfully their moral and constitutional right to educate their children as they see fit will, in fact, improve public education—i.e., the education of the public—and, more specifically, offer new opportunities to disadvantaged children. But am I sure about this? Can we be sure? Should we wait until we are sure? No, no, and no. . . . 

For some choice supporters, every up-tick in fourth-graders’ reading scores is a vindication of the power of market competition; likewise, for some opponents, every experiment that fails to achieve dramatic gains over the status quo exposes the hubris of the boosters of choice and competition.  As I have already mentioned, those who contend that school choice would reduce, not increase racial segregation; that choice would improve, not threaten, the lot of low-income and center-city students; that a choice-based education system would result, on balance, in a better educated citizenry; and that students whose parents are permitted to choose their schools will, for the most part, be as, if not more, tolerant, respectful, decent, and public-minded as today’s government-educated children appear to me to have the better of the argument. But, in Viteritti’s words, “not everyone would agree. Nor will they ever[.]”  I agree. There is no point to waiting, and no justification for waiting, for the data to demonstrate to everyone’s satisfaction the need for, and soundness of, choice-based reform. After all, I suspect that opposition to choice owes less to worries about holes in the research than to a cluster of concerns about the job security of union members and public employees, the place of religious education and discourse in a liberal society, and the moral and civic balkanization thought to be associated with the privatization of education. And so, what if we were to resign ourselves to the fact that the numbers, data, models, and statistics will always be difficult for reasonable, well meaning people to decipher? In other words, as Professor Viteritti puts it, why not “call it a draw.”  Instead of bickering about the meaning and significance of the information we have managed to glean from those few school-choice experiments that have managed to survive the gauntlet of litigation and regulation, why not ask whether good reasons exist, in the face of widespread demand by deserving parents, for refusing to embrace choice? Instead of saddling reformers with the burden of demonstrating, with Aristotelian rigor, the efficiency and effectiveness of choice, why not flip the question around—Why not? Parents want choice—why should they not have it?

Religious freedom as "the signature issue"

John Allen reports, in NCR, that religious freedom has emerged as "the signature issue" for the Synod of Bishops of the Middle East:

It’s only day one of the Oct. 10-24 Synod of Bishops for the Middle East, but already its signature issue has come into focus: Religious freedom, seen as the cornerstone of a healthy democratic society, and as a universal cause rather than special pleading for the region’s embattled Christian minority.

Freedom of conscience is “not so much a right to be claimed for Christians,” said Patriarch Antonios Naguib of the Egyptian Coptic church this morning. Instead, he said, it’s a “universal right, which Christians and Muslims defend together for the common good.” . . .

 . . .Distinguishing between religion and the state was a key theme.

“A positive laicity would permit an effective and fruitful contribution of the church and help strengthen the idea of citizenship, founded on the principles of equality and democracy, for every person in the country,” Naguib said.

The phrase “positive laicity” has been frequently used by Benedict XVI to invoke a form of secularism that recognizes the autonomy of the state from direct religious control, but without marginalizing religion or treating it as an exclusively private phenomenon. In turn, Benedict borrowed the idea of “positive laicity” from French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who has argued for a stronger role for churches and religious believers in ultra-secular French society. . . .

More on Smith and religious liberty

I appreciated the article to which Michael linked the other day, about the Smith case and its implications for religious liberty.  Obviously, I'm a fan of religious freedom, and appreciate fully the importance of an accommodations-regime to the health of religious freedom.  Having just returned from a conference on the anniversary of Smith at which it seemed clear that, for many, Smith is worth celebrating precisely because it makes it easier to remove the obstacles that religious-conscience can pose to certain regulatory and other agendas, I like to think I'm not naive about the dangers.  That said, the article's author, Allen Hertzke, writes:

In his majority opinion, Scalia argued that religious practices are not exempt from neutral and generally applicable laws unless legislators write those exemptions into law. At one level this rationale conformed to Scalia’s characteristic deference to legislative will. Religious accommodations are a legislative, not judicial, prerogative. But a deeper reading of his decision indicates something more troubling: the denial that even the most profound religious conscience claims need to be accommodated by authorities. . . .

I do not read as containing any such denial.  Indeed, one of the regrets I heard expressed about Smith at Cardozo was that it was too welcoming, in its language of legislative accommodations.  To say that "religious conscience claims need to be accommodated by authorities" is not, it seems to me, to say that "federal judges ought to have the power to carve out exemptions from generally applicable laws whenever they believe that such exemptions can be extended without jeopardizing a compelling state interest."

Hertzke also writes:

In a landmark volume on the subject sponsored by the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, Marc Stern, formerly of the liberal American Jewish Congress, meticulously catalogues how law will undercut religious freedom if same-sex marriage is widely adopted or, more likely, imposed by the courts without any provision for religious exemptions. In a remarkably dispassionate tone, Stern analyzes the welter of federal and state statutes, judicial rulings, and regulations on civil rights, harassment, public accommodations, commercial licenses, professional codes, government contracts, service vendors, reproductive technologies, student speech codes, and housing access. Though sympathetic to gay rights and supportive of laws enabling couples to organize their shared lives, Stern reaches a sobering conclusion: Once same-sex marriage is codified in law, this whole governmental apparatus will come down on dissenters—especially orthodox Jews and Christians and their institutions—and there will be little that can be done to ameliorate the effect. The freedom to affirm and to live in accordance with the biblical view of marriage—the view held by the Founders and by most Americans through the centuries—will have been profoundly diminished.

Against this formidable threat, the constitutional doctrine of strict scrutiny provides the most effective shield for believers unwilling to compromise duties they see as transcendent and for religious institutions determined to defend their autonomy. Given the manifest peril, it’s worth investigating new legislative remedies, however daunting the prospects.

But legal theorists and jurists also must take a fresh look. In the current environment of growing elite hostility toward religion, the test of compelling interest, which provides robust justification for accommodation of religious practices and institutions, is truer to the spirit of James Madison than putative neutrality. In his famous Memorial and Remonstrance, Madison anchored religious freedom in the “duty towards the creator” that “is precedent, both in order of time and in degree of obligation, to the claims of civil society.” Because of this prior duty, “no man’s right is abridged by the institution of Civil Society.” Because religious liberty is, in this profound sense, the first freedom, a key measure of a free society is the extent to which people are not forced to choose between sacred duties and citizenship obligations. 

In his day, Madison thought that the prior “duty towards the creator” would be protected if religion were “wholly exempt” from the “cognizance” of civil society and its law; thus he saw no need for religious exemptions or accommodations. In the contemporary environment, however—where zoning boards prevent church construction, where the Amish can’t build their houses in accordance with their faith, where abortion rights trump religious conscience, where support for traditional marriage is equated with bigotry—avoiding “cognizance” of religion in the supposedly neutral application of secular laws will eviscerate religious liberty. In the regulatory age, the compelling interest justification properly recognizes religious liberty as a fundamental right, forged in the crucible of the nation’s social compact. 

I agree -- these warnings and reminders are welcome and appropriate.  It is *not* the case (but, in my view, Smith never says otherwise) that what religious freedom is is merely religion-blind neutrality or non-"cognizance" by government.  More is needed, to guarantee freedom for religion.  My point is just that Smith does not preclude us from doing more.

"Selective curiosity" regarding sexual abuse by clergy

This piece , "Our Selective Curiosity on Sex Scandals", appeared recently in the Denver Post:

Is the Baptist ministry prone to sexual abuse against minors? Just wondering.

After all, four young men have accused Baptist megachurch leader Bishop Eddie Long in suburban Atlanta of luring them into sex when they were teens, and it's hardly the first time a well-known Baptist preacher has been linked to such scandal. Yet the case has been framed in news accounts mostly as an example of possible hypocrisy: Prominent anti-gay pastor accused of having sex with male teens.

No one, meanwhile, is suggesting the Baptist ministry is a refuge for pedophiles, as is commonly said of the Catholic Church.

Is that because Baptist ministers are less likely than Catholic priests to have sex with minors? That may be the popular impression, but no one actually knows. Hard data on sexual abuse by ministers simply don't exist, any more than they do for scoutmasters, school teachers, guidance counselors, staff at juvenile detention facilities, and other professions dealing with youth.

"Sexual misconduct appears to be spread fairly evenly across the denominations, though I stress the word 'appears,' " maintains Philip Jenkins, Penn State professor of history and religious studies. "Astonishingly, Catholic priests are literally the only profession in the country for whom we have relatively good figures for the incdence of child abuse and molestation." . . .

. . .

It goes without saying that there have been far too many victims of sexual abuse by clergy, that some dioceses once handled predators in inexcusable fashion, and that the bishops responsible (mostly retired or deceased) were never held accountable.

But it is equally true that many people on both the political left and right, for very different reasons, have been perfectly willing to fuel the fiction that nothing has changed and that, moreover, the church was a uniquely culpable institution. And never mind if the evidence — or lack of it — tells a different story.



Read more: Our selective curiosity on sex scandals - The Denver Post http://www.denverpost.com/opinion/ci_16281737#ixzz12AdlJmbq

Arkes on "Evidence"

Hadley Arkes has an interesting essay, at "The Catholic Thing", called "On Evidence."  A bit: 

 . . .That eminent lawyer, Robert Bork, once remarked with his lawyer’s eye that the critical point was whether Jesus died and yet came back from the dead. If that happened, as Bork put it with a telling understatement, implications do flow from that point. When Jesus appeared again after he was buried, he elicited doubt even among the faithful. As James Wilson noted, he invited Thomas to seek the evidence of his senses by touching his wounds. The followers of Jesus, men anchored in the world of work with their hands, were not exactly a credulous lot. And yet, what they saw jolted them, and their lives would never be the same. It was the most direct evidence, the evidence of the senses, joined to the powers of inference; and from that point, grounded in things so elementary and true, the implications began to unfold, as they are unfolding even now.

Doerflinger receives Notre Dame Fund's first Evangelium Vitae medal

Congratulations to Richard Doerflinger:

Richard Doerflinger, associate director of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) Secretariat for Pro Life Activities, will receive the University of Notre Dame Fund to Protect Human Life Evangelium Vitae Medal.

According to David Solomon, chair of the fund’s governing committee and William P. and Hazel B. White Director of the Center for Ethics and Culture, “the fund is establishing the annual Notre Dame Evangelium Vitae Medal to honor individuals whose outstanding efforts have served to proclaim the Gospel of Life by steadfastly affirming and defending the sanctity of human life from its earliest stages. Richard Doerflinger’s unwavering commitment and heroic witness to life on Capitol Hill and beyond make him the perfect first recipient.” . . .