The
following articles on SSRN might be of interest:
Lisa
R Pruitt, ‘The rural lawscape: space tames law tames space’ (forthcoming in I Braverman, N Blomley, D Delaney & A Kedar
(eds), The expanding spaces of law: a timely legal geography (Stanford
University Press, 2013)):
A
fundamental tenet of legal geographies scholarship is that the legal and the
spatial are mutually constituting. This chapter investigates that dynamic in
contemporary rural contexts in the United States. In particular, I posit that
law and rural spatiality are at odds with one another because the presence of
law as an ordering, governing, regulating force of state is in tension with the
socio-spatial character of rurality. Law seeks to tame or control rural
spatiality, but the material (low population density, dominance of nature over
the built environment) and associated social characteristics of rural and
remote places effectively resist those efforts. Rural spatiality’s features
tend to impede the efforts of law’s agents and processes, making for a thinner,
less robust legal presence.
Critical
and legal geographers, like legal scholars generally, have largely ignored the
rural end of the rural-urban continuum, reflecting a rarely acknowledged urban-normativity
(not to mention urban hubris). This chapter begins the work of recovering the
rural, bringing it into scholarly view in order to broaden our understanding of
the diffuse and localized operation of law in rural places. The chapter is thus
a step toward theorizing the significance and force of rural spatiality in
relation to law and legal processes. But the investigation into the rural
lawscape reveals something not only about rural difference, but also about the
otherwise obscure nature of law as variegated and variable. Further, looking to
the rural margins reveals something about the center because the process by
which law differentiates the rural also depicts, at least implicitly, the
default urban norm.
Mark
D Rosen ‘Religious institutions, liberal states, and the political architecture
of overlapping spheres’ (forthcoming, University of Illinois Law Review)
Alongside
the contemporary consensus favoring strong protections for individual religious
liberty, controversial new claims on behalf of religiously affiliated
institutions have been asserted with increasing frequency. They raise difficult
questions. For example, are churches entitled to a “ministerial exception”
exempting them from federal anti-discrimination laws when hiring and firing
ministers? Must Catholic hospitals be exempted from the Affordable Care Act’s
“contraception mandate,” which requires that employers provide their employees
health insurance that includes contraceptive devices, because use of
contraceptives is contrary to Catholic tenets?
To
date, scholars have staked out two diametrically opposed approaches. One group
argues that churches have inherent autonomy, and a corresponding jurisdictional
independence of the state, vis-à-vis matters within the church’s domain. A
second argues that churches are voluntary associations that accordingly enjoy
no protections beyond their members’ constitutional and statutory rights. The
first group favors the ministerial exception and exemptions from the
contraception mandate, whereas the second group opposes them.
This
Article critiques both approaches, and provides an alternative framework
derived from John Rawls’s monumental works on political theory. What this
Article calls the “Religious Institution Principle” provides a basis for
determining what qualifies as a religious institution, as it explains why
religious institutions are not reducible to their members, and why they are
meaningfully different from most, possibly all, other associations. But
religious institutions do not have any inherent autonomy. Not all religions are
entitled to the Religious Institution Principle’s protections, and the
principle does not provide anything approaching full immunity from state
regulation for the religions falling within its coverage.
In
essence, whereas the first scholarly approach treats state and church as
separate juridical spheres, and the second approach eliminates the distinct
sphere of religion by folding churches into their individual members, this
Article conceptualizes government and religious institutions as overlapping
spheres.
The
Religious Institution Principle’s derivation reveals why it is fair, and why it
plausibly can be thought to be acceptable to both religious and non-religious
citizens. The principle generates a robust normative framework for evaluating
religious institutions’ claims, which the Article applies to a wide array of
difficult questions, including the polygamy decision in Reynolds v. United
States, sexual abuse lawsuits against clergy, the ministerial exception, the
contraception mandate, and the church autonomy cases.
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