Kent Greenawalt, Defender of the Faith

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW Texas Law Review Pub Date : 2017-02-03 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2911915
A. Koppelman
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Abstract

Kent Greenawalt, Defender of the Faith Exemptions: Necessary, Justified, or Misguided? By Kent Greenawalt. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2016. 288 pages. $49.95.IntroductionNot long ago almost everybody loved the idea of exempting religious objectors from generally applicable laws. In 1993, after the Supreme Court, abandoning a decades-old rule, noted that exemptions weren't constitutionally required,1 Congress was nearly unanimous in reversing that result by statute.2Two controversies have splintered that coalition. The 1993 law, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), has been deployed to challenge the so-called "contraception mandate," which requires employee and student health insurance plans to cover the costs of most forms of contraception.3 Litigants have sought, and some state legislatures have attempted to provide, religious exemptions from laws banning discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.4More fundamental than either of these flashpoints is a growing sense that it is unfair to single out religion in this way-that religion is not distinctive enough to deserve special treatment by the law.5So Kent Greenawalt's defense of exemptions is well timed. For many years, Greenawalt has been a giant in the field of law and religion. His twovolume treatise, Religion and the Constitution,6 is the most comprehensive treatment of the law of the religion clauses. This new book takes on the specific issue of exemptions in shorter compass, centered on these newer controversies that have arisen since the earlier volumes were published. He has an easy mastery of this complex area. He writes beautifully.The book is a careful defense of exemptions against the new challenges. It does not offer any general theory of exemptions, instead focusing closely on the details of specific types of situations. The general lesson is that "no sensible person can suggest that all claims of exemption should be granted or refused."7The book ranges over a wide range of issues, though it is not quite as comprehensive as the first volume of his treatise.8 Its aim is "to explore the complexity of many concerns about exemptions and implicitly encourage those on opposite sides of particular controversies to recognize, and perhaps even acknowledge, that competing considerations do carry some weight."9 Greenawalt selects his cases with that in mind.10A large literature of general theories of religious accommodation is on offer.11 He resists them all.No single theory covers everything; multiple reasons typically support a practice and carry varying weights in different contexts. This reality applies to many particular issues about government concessions not to perform general duties. Once this is recognized, people should not expect matters to reduce to a single justification that clearly warrants some exemptions and does not warrant others . . . .12If the book has a general thesis, it is that exemptions should not be rejected wholesale.Exemptions is, however, deliberately unhelpful with respect to broader questions that weigh on the minds of many. Why is it fair, as a general matter, to single out religion for special treatment? And what general principles should legislatures or courts follow if they are going to devise exemptions on an ad hoc basis?An intervention tailored to contemporary debates ought to address these questions, which have become so salient.The overall pattern of special treatment is what has generated a sense of unfairness. Even if the details can be shown to cumulate intelligibly, a defense of exemptions needs to say something about what the cumulation amounts to. The book is thus an important but incomplete defense of exemptions.This Review will offer an account of the missing principles inferred from what Greenawalt does say.Whatever is valuable about religion is not directly detectable by law. People are too opaque to one another for the state to assess the value of each person's attachments. …
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肯特·格里纳沃特,信仰的捍卫者
Kent Greenawalt,信仰豁免的捍卫者:必要的、正当的还是误导的?Kent Greenawalt著。马萨诸塞州剑桥:哈佛大学出版社,2016年。288页$49.95.引言不久前,几乎每个人都喜欢豁免宗教反对者遵守普遍适用法律的想法。1993年,最高法院放弃了一项已有数十年历史的规则,指出宪法不要求豁免,1国会几乎一致通过法律推翻了这一结果。2两个争议使该联盟分裂。1993年的《宗教自由恢复法》(RFRA)旨在挑战所谓的“避孕强制令”,该强制令要求员工和学生的健康保险计划支付大多数避孕形式的费用,禁止基于性取向的歧视的法律中的宗教豁免。4比这两个热点更根本的是,人们越来越意识到,以这种方式单独挑出宗教是不公平的,因为宗教不够独特,不值得法律给予特殊待遇。5因此,Kent Greenawalt对豁免的辩护恰逢其时。多年来,格里纳沃特一直是法律和宗教领域的巨人。他的两卷本专著《宗教与宪法》6是对宗教法条款最全面的论述。这本新书在较短的范围内探讨了豁免的具体问题,集中在自前几卷出版以来出现的这些新争议上。他轻而易举地掌握了这个复杂的领域。他写得很漂亮。这本书谨慎地为豁免辩护,以应对新的挑战。它没有提供任何豁免的一般理论,而是密切关注特定类型情况的细节。一般的教训是,“任何明智的人都不能建议批准或拒绝所有豁免申请。”7这本书涵盖了广泛的问题,尽管它没有他的论文第一卷那么全面。8它的目的是“探索许多关于豁免的担忧的复杂性,并含蓄地鼓励那些处于特定争议对立双方的人认识到,甚至承认,相互竞争的考虑确实有一定的分量。”。“9 Greenawalt在选择自己的案例时考虑到了这一点。10有大量关于宗教通融的一般理论文献。11他拒绝所有这些理论。没有一个单一的理论涵盖一切;多种原因通常支持一种做法,并在不同的背景下具有不同的分量。这一现实适用于许多关于政府不履行一般职责的让步的特定问题人们不应该期望事情变成一个单一的理由,明确地保证某些豁免,而不保证其他豁免。12如果这本书有一个一般性的论点,那就是豁免不应该被全盘拒绝。然而,对于许多人心中的更广泛的问题,豁免是故意无益的。为什么把宗教单独列为特殊待遇是公平的?如果立法机构或法院要临时制定豁免,他们应该遵循什么样的一般原则?为当代辩论量身定制的干预措施应该解决这些问题,这些问题已经变得如此突出。特殊待遇的总体模式产生了一种不公平感。即使细节可以清楚地累积起来,对豁免的辩护也需要说明累积的金额。因此,这本书是对豁免的重要但不完整的辩护。本评论将对Greenawalt所说的缺失原则进行说明。任何关于宗教的有价值的东西都是法律无法直接检测到的。人们彼此之间太不透明,国家无法评估每个人的依恋价值…
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CiteScore
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期刊介绍: The Texas Law Review is a national and international leader in legal scholarship. Texas Law Review is an independent journal, edited and published entirely by students at the University of Texas School of Law. Our seven issues per year contain articles by professors, judges, and practitioners; reviews of important recent books from recognized experts, essays, commentaries; and student written notes. Texas Law Review is currently the ninth most cited legal periodical in federal and state cases in the United States and the thirteenth most cited by legal journals.
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