The Rise of Corporate Religious Liberty
Herausgeber: Schwartzman, Micah; Robinson, Zoë; Flanders, Chad
The Rise of Corporate Religious Liberty
Herausgeber: Schwartzman, Micah; Robinson, Zoë; Flanders, Chad
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The Rise of Corporate Religious Liberty explores this "corporate" turn in law and religion. Drawing on a broad range perspectives, this book examines the idea of "freedom of the church," the rights of for-profit corporations, and the implications of the Supreme Court's landmark decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby.
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The Rise of Corporate Religious Liberty explores this "corporate" turn in law and religion. Drawing on a broad range perspectives, this book examines the idea of "freedom of the church," the rights of for-profit corporations, and the implications of the Supreme Court's landmark decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 528
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Januar 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 155mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 726g
- ISBN-13: 9780190262532
- ISBN-10: 0190262532
- Artikelnr.: 47868872
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- Seitenzahl: 528
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Januar 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 155mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 726g
- ISBN-13: 9780190262532
- ISBN-10: 0190262532
- Artikelnr.: 47868872
Micah Schwartzman is the Edward F. Howrey Professor of Law at the University of Virginia School of Law. Chad Flanders is Assistant Professor of Law at the St. Louis University School of Law. Zoë Robinson is Professor of Law at the DePaul University College of Law.
* Table of Contents
* Acknowledgments
* Contributors
* Introduction
* Chad Flanders, Micah Schwartzman, and Zoë Robinson
* Part I: From Religious Liberty to Freedom of the Church
* Chapter 1: Religious Toleration and Claims of Conscience
* Kent Greenawalt
* Chapter 2: The Jurisdictional Conception of Church Autonomy
* Steven D. Smith
* Chapter 3: Freedom of the Church: (Toward) An Exposition,
Translation, and Defense
* Richard W. Garnett
* Chapter 4: Religious Corporations and Disestablishment, 1780-1840
* Sarah Barringer Gordon
* Chapter 5: Why Churches (and, Possibly, the Tarpon Bay Women's Blue
Water Fishing Club) Can Discriminate
* Lawrence Sager
* Chapter 6: Religious Organizations and the Analogy to Political
Parties
* Chad Flanders
* Part II: From Freedom of the Church to Corporate Religious Liberty
* Chapter 7: Hobby Lobby: Its Flawed Interpretive Techniques and
Standards of Application
* Kent Greenawalt
* Chapter 8: Corporate Law and Theory in Hobby Lobby
* Elizabeth Pollman
* Chapter 9: Hosanna-Tabor after Hobby Lobby
* Zoë Robinson
* Chapter 10: Lessons from the Free Speech Clause
* Frederick Schauer
* Chapter 11: Religious Institutionalism-Why Now?
* Paul Horwitz and Nelson Tebbe
* Part III: Hobby Lobby's Implications
* Chapter 12: The Campaign against Religious Liberty
* Douglas Laycock
* Chapter 13: Bargaining for Religious Accommodations: Same-Sex
Marriage and LGBT Rights after Hobby Lobby
* Robin Fretwell Wilson
* Chapter 14: Keeping Hobby Lobby in Perspective
* Christopher C. Lund
* Chapter 15: Healthcare Exemptions and the Future of Corporate
Religious Liberty
* Elizabeth Sepper
* Chapter 16: Of Burdens and Baselines: Hobby Lobby's Puzzling Footnote
37
* Frederick Mark Gedicks and Rebecca G. Van Tassell
* Part IV: Challenges to Corporate Religious Liberty
* Chapter 17: Some Realism about Corporate Rights
* Richard Schragger and Micah Schwartzman
* Chapter 18: Religious Exemptions and the Limited Relevance of
Corporate Identity
* Ira C. Lupu and Robert W. Tuttle
* Chapter 19: Freedom of the Church and Our Endangered Civil Rights:
Exiting the Social Contract
* Robin West
* Chapter 20: Change, Dissent, and the Problem of Consent in Religious
Organizations
* B. Jessie Hill
* Chapter 21: The New Religious Institutionalism Meets the Old
Establishment Clause
* Gregory P. Magarian
* Chapter 22: Religion and the Roberts Court: The Limits of Religious
Pluralism in Constitutional Law
* Mark Tushnet
* Index
* Acknowledgments
* Contributors
* Introduction
* Chad Flanders, Micah Schwartzman, and Zoë Robinson
* Part I: From Religious Liberty to Freedom of the Church
* Chapter 1: Religious Toleration and Claims of Conscience
* Kent Greenawalt
* Chapter 2: The Jurisdictional Conception of Church Autonomy
* Steven D. Smith
* Chapter 3: Freedom of the Church: (Toward) An Exposition,
Translation, and Defense
* Richard W. Garnett
* Chapter 4: Religious Corporations and Disestablishment, 1780-1840
* Sarah Barringer Gordon
* Chapter 5: Why Churches (and, Possibly, the Tarpon Bay Women's Blue
Water Fishing Club) Can Discriminate
* Lawrence Sager
* Chapter 6: Religious Organizations and the Analogy to Political
Parties
* Chad Flanders
* Part II: From Freedom of the Church to Corporate Religious Liberty
* Chapter 7: Hobby Lobby: Its Flawed Interpretive Techniques and
Standards of Application
* Kent Greenawalt
* Chapter 8: Corporate Law and Theory in Hobby Lobby
* Elizabeth Pollman
* Chapter 9: Hosanna-Tabor after Hobby Lobby
* Zoë Robinson
* Chapter 10: Lessons from the Free Speech Clause
* Frederick Schauer
* Chapter 11: Religious Institutionalism-Why Now?
* Paul Horwitz and Nelson Tebbe
* Part III: Hobby Lobby's Implications
* Chapter 12: The Campaign against Religious Liberty
* Douglas Laycock
* Chapter 13: Bargaining for Religious Accommodations: Same-Sex
Marriage and LGBT Rights after Hobby Lobby
* Robin Fretwell Wilson
* Chapter 14: Keeping Hobby Lobby in Perspective
* Christopher C. Lund
* Chapter 15: Healthcare Exemptions and the Future of Corporate
Religious Liberty
* Elizabeth Sepper
* Chapter 16: Of Burdens and Baselines: Hobby Lobby's Puzzling Footnote
37
* Frederick Mark Gedicks and Rebecca G. Van Tassell
* Part IV: Challenges to Corporate Religious Liberty
* Chapter 17: Some Realism about Corporate Rights
* Richard Schragger and Micah Schwartzman
* Chapter 18: Religious Exemptions and the Limited Relevance of
Corporate Identity
* Ira C. Lupu and Robert W. Tuttle
* Chapter 19: Freedom of the Church and Our Endangered Civil Rights:
Exiting the Social Contract
* Robin West
* Chapter 20: Change, Dissent, and the Problem of Consent in Religious
Organizations
* B. Jessie Hill
* Chapter 21: The New Religious Institutionalism Meets the Old
Establishment Clause
* Gregory P. Magarian
* Chapter 22: Religion and the Roberts Court: The Limits of Religious
Pluralism in Constitutional Law
* Mark Tushnet
* Index
* Table of Contents
* Acknowledgments
* Contributors
* Introduction
* Chad Flanders, Micah Schwartzman, and Zoë Robinson
* Part I: From Religious Liberty to Freedom of the Church
* Chapter 1: Religious Toleration and Claims of Conscience
* Kent Greenawalt
* Chapter 2: The Jurisdictional Conception of Church Autonomy
* Steven D. Smith
* Chapter 3: Freedom of the Church: (Toward) An Exposition,
Translation, and Defense
* Richard W. Garnett
* Chapter 4: Religious Corporations and Disestablishment, 1780-1840
* Sarah Barringer Gordon
* Chapter 5: Why Churches (and, Possibly, the Tarpon Bay Women's Blue
Water Fishing Club) Can Discriminate
* Lawrence Sager
* Chapter 6: Religious Organizations and the Analogy to Political
Parties
* Chad Flanders
* Part II: From Freedom of the Church to Corporate Religious Liberty
* Chapter 7: Hobby Lobby: Its Flawed Interpretive Techniques and
Standards of Application
* Kent Greenawalt
* Chapter 8: Corporate Law and Theory in Hobby Lobby
* Elizabeth Pollman
* Chapter 9: Hosanna-Tabor after Hobby Lobby
* Zoë Robinson
* Chapter 10: Lessons from the Free Speech Clause
* Frederick Schauer
* Chapter 11: Religious Institutionalism-Why Now?
* Paul Horwitz and Nelson Tebbe
* Part III: Hobby Lobby's Implications
* Chapter 12: The Campaign against Religious Liberty
* Douglas Laycock
* Chapter 13: Bargaining for Religious Accommodations: Same-Sex
Marriage and LGBT Rights after Hobby Lobby
* Robin Fretwell Wilson
* Chapter 14: Keeping Hobby Lobby in Perspective
* Christopher C. Lund
* Chapter 15: Healthcare Exemptions and the Future of Corporate
Religious Liberty
* Elizabeth Sepper
* Chapter 16: Of Burdens and Baselines: Hobby Lobby's Puzzling Footnote
37
* Frederick Mark Gedicks and Rebecca G. Van Tassell
* Part IV: Challenges to Corporate Religious Liberty
* Chapter 17: Some Realism about Corporate Rights
* Richard Schragger and Micah Schwartzman
* Chapter 18: Religious Exemptions and the Limited Relevance of
Corporate Identity
* Ira C. Lupu and Robert W. Tuttle
* Chapter 19: Freedom of the Church and Our Endangered Civil Rights:
Exiting the Social Contract
* Robin West
* Chapter 20: Change, Dissent, and the Problem of Consent in Religious
Organizations
* B. Jessie Hill
* Chapter 21: The New Religious Institutionalism Meets the Old
Establishment Clause
* Gregory P. Magarian
* Chapter 22: Religion and the Roberts Court: The Limits of Religious
Pluralism in Constitutional Law
* Mark Tushnet
* Index
* Acknowledgments
* Contributors
* Introduction
* Chad Flanders, Micah Schwartzman, and Zoë Robinson
* Part I: From Religious Liberty to Freedom of the Church
* Chapter 1: Religious Toleration and Claims of Conscience
* Kent Greenawalt
* Chapter 2: The Jurisdictional Conception of Church Autonomy
* Steven D. Smith
* Chapter 3: Freedom of the Church: (Toward) An Exposition,
Translation, and Defense
* Richard W. Garnett
* Chapter 4: Religious Corporations and Disestablishment, 1780-1840
* Sarah Barringer Gordon
* Chapter 5: Why Churches (and, Possibly, the Tarpon Bay Women's Blue
Water Fishing Club) Can Discriminate
* Lawrence Sager
* Chapter 6: Religious Organizations and the Analogy to Political
Parties
* Chad Flanders
* Part II: From Freedom of the Church to Corporate Religious Liberty
* Chapter 7: Hobby Lobby: Its Flawed Interpretive Techniques and
Standards of Application
* Kent Greenawalt
* Chapter 8: Corporate Law and Theory in Hobby Lobby
* Elizabeth Pollman
* Chapter 9: Hosanna-Tabor after Hobby Lobby
* Zoë Robinson
* Chapter 10: Lessons from the Free Speech Clause
* Frederick Schauer
* Chapter 11: Religious Institutionalism-Why Now?
* Paul Horwitz and Nelson Tebbe
* Part III: Hobby Lobby's Implications
* Chapter 12: The Campaign against Religious Liberty
* Douglas Laycock
* Chapter 13: Bargaining for Religious Accommodations: Same-Sex
Marriage and LGBT Rights after Hobby Lobby
* Robin Fretwell Wilson
* Chapter 14: Keeping Hobby Lobby in Perspective
* Christopher C. Lund
* Chapter 15: Healthcare Exemptions and the Future of Corporate
Religious Liberty
* Elizabeth Sepper
* Chapter 16: Of Burdens and Baselines: Hobby Lobby's Puzzling Footnote
37
* Frederick Mark Gedicks and Rebecca G. Van Tassell
* Part IV: Challenges to Corporate Religious Liberty
* Chapter 17: Some Realism about Corporate Rights
* Richard Schragger and Micah Schwartzman
* Chapter 18: Religious Exemptions and the Limited Relevance of
Corporate Identity
* Ira C. Lupu and Robert W. Tuttle
* Chapter 19: Freedom of the Church and Our Endangered Civil Rights:
Exiting the Social Contract
* Robin West
* Chapter 20: Change, Dissent, and the Problem of Consent in Religious
Organizations
* B. Jessie Hill
* Chapter 21: The New Religious Institutionalism Meets the Old
Establishment Clause
* Gregory P. Magarian
* Chapter 22: Religion and the Roberts Court: The Limits of Religious
Pluralism in Constitutional Law
* Mark Tushnet
* Index