ESPINOZA, GOVERNMENT FUNDING, AND RELIGIOUS CHOICE

Author:

Berg Thomas C.,Laycock Douglas

Abstract

AbstractThe U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue, holding that religious schools cannot be excluded from a state program of financial aid to private schools, is another incremental step in the Court's long-running project to reform the constitutional law of financial aid to religious institutions. There was nothing surprising about the decision, and it changed little; it was the inevitable next link in a long chain of decisions. To those observers still attached to the most expansive rhetoric of no-aid separationism, it is the world turned upside down. But the Court has been steadily marching away from that rhetoric for thirty-five years now. The more recent decisions, including Espinoza, do a far better job than no-aid separationism of separating the religious choices and commitments of the American people from the coercive power of the government. And that is the separation that is and should be the ultimate concern of the Religion Clauses—to minimize the government's interference with or influence on religion, and to leave each American free to exercise or reject religion in his or her own way, neither encouraged by the government nor discouraged or penalized by the government.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Law,Religious studies

Reference9 articles.

1. An Economic Approach to Issues of Religious Freedom;Posner;University of Chicago Law Review,1989

2. Comment: Churches, Playgrounds, Government Dollars—and Schools?;Laycock;Harvard Law Review,2017

3. The Mistakes in Locke v. Davey and the Future of State Payments for Services Provided by Religious Institutions;Berg;University of Tulsa Law Review,2004

4. Theology Scholarships, the Pledge of Allegiance, and Religious Liberty: Avoiding the Extremes but Missing the Liberty

5. Formal, Substantive, and Disaggregated Neutrality toward Religion;Laycock;DePaul Law Review,1990

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