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Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Law
Tradition, Policy And The Establishment Clause: Justice Kennedy's Opinion In Town Of Greece V. Galloway, Wilson Huhn
Tradition, Policy And The Establishment Clause: Justice Kennedy's Opinion In Town Of Greece V. Galloway, Wilson Huhn
ConLawNOW
The great jurisprudential battle that has raged in the Supreme Court for more than a century and the question that our society has struggled with since the advent of the Civil War is whether the Constitution is a command by our ancestors that we retain the same political structures, social hierarchies, and cultural traditions that they had, or whether it reflects ideals of liberty, equality, fairness, and tolerance that they aspired to and that they expected us to reach for. That struggle between rules and standards, doctrine and principles, conventionalism and consequentialism, tradition and policy in the interpretation of the …
Notre Dame Law School Graduation Prayer Service Program 2015, Notre Dame Law School
Notre Dame Law School Graduation Prayer Service Program 2015, Notre Dame Law School
Commencement Programs
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME LAW SCHOOL GRADUATION PRAYER SERVICE BASILICA OF THE SACRED HEART
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME DU LAC
9:30 AM MAY 16, 2015
George Washington. Elena Kagan, And The Town Of Greece, New York: The First Amendment And Religious Minorities, Kermit V. Lipez
George Washington. Elena Kagan, And The Town Of Greece, New York: The First Amendment And Religious Minorities, Kermit V. Lipez
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
No abstract provided.
Tradition, Policy And The Establishment Clause: Justice Kennedy's Opinion In Town Of Greece V. Galloway, Wilson Huhn
Tradition, Policy And The Establishment Clause: Justice Kennedy's Opinion In Town Of Greece V. Galloway, Wilson Huhn
Con Law Center Articles and Publications
The great jurisprudential battle that has raged in the Supreme Court for more than a century and the question that our society has struggled with since the advent of the Civil War is whether the Constitution is a command by our ancestors that we retain the same political structures, social hierarchies, and cultural traditions that they had, or whether it reflects ideals of liberty, equality, fairness, and tolerance that they aspired to and that they expected us to reach for. That struggle between rules and standards, doctrine and principles, conventionalism and consequentialism, tradition and policy in the interpretation of the …
The Rising None: Marsh, Galloway, And The End Of Legislative Prayer, Nicholas C. Roberts
The Rising None: Marsh, Galloway, And The End Of Legislative Prayer, Nicholas C. Roberts
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Intentional Discrimination In Establishment Clause Jurisprudence, Caroline Mala Corbin
Intentional Discrimination In Establishment Clause Jurisprudence, Caroline Mala Corbin
Articles
In Town of Greece, New York v. Galloway, the Supreme Court upheld a legislative prayer practice with overwhelmingly Christian prayers in part because the Court concluded that the exclusion of all other religions was unintentional. This requirement-that a religiously disparate impact must be intentional before it amounts to an establishment violation-is new for Establishment Clause doctrine. An intent requirement, however, is not new for equal protection or free exercise claims. This Essay explores the increased symmetry between the Establishment Clause, the Equal Protection Clause, and the Free Exercise Clause. It argues that many of the critiques of the intentional …
The Hallowed Hope: The School Prayer Cases And Social Change, Lauren Maisel Goldsmith, James R. Dillon
The Hallowed Hope: The School Prayer Cases And Social Change, Lauren Maisel Goldsmith, James R. Dillon
Saint Louis University Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Improving The Law School Classroom And Experience Through Prayer: An Empirical Study, David A. Grenardo
Improving The Law School Classroom And Experience Through Prayer: An Empirical Study, David A. Grenardo
Faculty Articles
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. once said, “To be a Christian without prayer is no more possible than to be alive without breathing.” There are approximately fifty religiously affiliated law schools in the United States. As faith-based communities, these law schools can integrate their faiths into the education they provide by, among other things, incorporating in the classroom a central characteristic of most religions – prayer.
This article includes anonymous survey responses from students at four different Catholic law schools across the nation concerning whether the students liked the fact that their professors prayed at the beginning of class. The …