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Religious Liberty, Volume 2: The Free Exercise Clause: Emory University Studies in Law and Religion (Eerdmans)

Autor Douglas Laycock
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 mar 2011
For more than thirty years, Douglas Laycock has been studying, defending, and writing about religious liberty. In this second volume of the comprehensive collection of his writings on the subject, he has compiled articles, amicus briefs, and actual court documents relating to regulatory exemptions under the Constitution, the right to church autonomy, and the rights of non-mainstream religions. This collection which deals with religious schools and colleges, sex abuse cases, the rights of Hare Krishnas and Scientologists, the landmark decision Employment Division v. Smith, and more will be a valuable reference for churches, schools, and other religious organizations as they exercise their Constitutionally protected freedom of religion.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780802865229
ISBN-10: 0802865224
Pagini: 853
Dimensiuni: 152 x 231 x 48 mm
Greutate: 1.23 kg
Editura: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
Seria Emory University Studies in Law and Religion (Eerdmans)


Recenzii

"A must for academic and law-school libraries. . . . A treasure trove of information for those who teach or practice church-state law." -- Voice of Reason "Any person who cares about religious liberty in America (and we should all be greatly concerned about its increasingly fragile condition) needs to read Douglas Laycock." -- Kim Colby Center for Law and Religious Freedom "The church-state field is blessed with serious scholars, persuasive advocates, dynamic teachers, astute political strategists, and public commentators. Douglas Laycock is one of a very few who are all of these. I welcome this multivolume collection of his always insightful and lucid writings -- from scholarly law review articles to USA Today op-ed pieces. Even those who may disagree with Laycock's interpretation and application of the First Amendment's religion clauses will be hard-pressed to gainsay these sentiments." -- J. Brent Walker