Free Exercise and the Problem of Symmetry

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW Hastings Law Journal Pub Date : 2005-08-01 DOI:10.31228/osf.io/s8xpc
N. Tebbe
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Abstract

This Article identifies a difficulty with the neutrality paradigm that currently shapes thinking about the Free Exercise Clause both on the Supreme Court and among its leading critics. It proposes a liberty component, shows how it would generate more attractive results than neutrality alone, and defends the liberty approach against likely objections. A controversial neutrality rule currently governs cases brought under the Free Exercise Clause. Under that rule, only laws and policies that have the purpose of discriminating against religion draw heightened scrutiny. All others are presumptively constitutional, regardless of how severely they burden religious practices. Critics have attacked the Court's rule with compelling normative arguments. Curiously, though, the leading academic critics have not directed those arguments against neutrality itself. Rather, they have argued that the Court has adopted the wrong sort of neutrality principle. Instead of purposive neutrality, they call for substantive neutrality. That approach would closely scrutinize not only laws or policies that discriminate purposefully, but also those that have the incidental effect of disadvantaging religion. This Article points out a difficulty with the critics' proposal that it calls the problem of symmetry. In order to qualify as neutral, substantive neutrality must apply in the same way to laws that benefit religion as to laws that burden it. Neutralists could not apply strict substantive neutrality to laws that burden religion, but only the more permissive purposive neutrality to laws that benefit religion. That regime would not be neutral. It would systematically advantage religion in violation of evenhandedness. Some of the leading academic critics recognize that substantive neutrality must resist laws that favor religion as well as those that disfavor it. But many of their practical proposals seem to violate the symmetry constraint. Accommodations of religion, in particular, often have the effect of advantaging religious practices over comparable secular activities. For instance, the critics must strongly support the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, which applies strict scrutiny (as a statutory matter) to prison regulations that incidentally but substantially burden religious observance among inmates. The Supreme Court recently upheld that law even though it has the effect of advantaging sacred practices over analogous secular ones. The critics surely must applaud that result. Yet advantaging religious over secular practices is difficult to square with substantive neutrality. Liberty, in contrast to neutrality, is asymmetrical. It protects religious freedom regardless of whether doing so incidentally advantages observance over comparable secular practices. This Article argues that a liberty component is necessary to vindicate the critics' own normative intuitions concerning the proper role of religious freedom in American democracy.
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自由练习和对称问题
这篇文章指出了中立范式的一个困难,这个范式目前塑造了最高法院及其主要批评者对自由行使条款的思考。它提出了一个自由的组成部分,展示了它如何比单独的中立产生更有吸引力的结果,并为自由的方法辩护,反对可能的反对意见。一项有争议的中立规则目前管辖根据自由行使条款提起的案件。根据这一规定,只有以歧视宗教为目的的法律和政策才会受到更严格的审查。其他所有条款都假定符合宪法,不管它们给宗教活动带来了多么沉重的负担。批评者以令人信服的规范性论点攻击最高法院的裁决。然而,奇怪的是,主要的学术评论家并没有将这些论点指向中立本身。相反,他们认为最高法院采用了错误的中立原则。他们要求的不是目的性中立,而是实质性中立。这种方法不仅要仔细审查蓄意歧视的法律或政策,而且还要仔细审查那些附带对宗教不利的法律或政策。这篇文章指出了批评家的提议的一个难点,即所谓的对称问题。为了符合中立的资格,实质性中立必须以同样的方式适用于有利于宗教的法律,也适用于给宗教带来负担的法律。中立主义者不能对加重宗教负担的法律实行严格的实质性中立,而只能对有利于宗教的法律实行较为宽松的目的性中立。这个政权不会是中立的。它将系统性地利用宗教,违背公平原则。一些主要的学术评论家认识到,实质性中立必须既反对那些有利于宗教的法律,也反对那些不利于宗教的法律。但他们的许多实际建议似乎违反了对称约束。尤其是对宗教的调整,往往会使宗教活动比可比的世俗活动更有利。例如,批评者必须强烈支持《宗教土地使用和机构人员法》,该法案(作为一项法定事项)对监狱条例进行严格审查,这些条例附带但实质上加重了囚犯的宗教仪式负担。最高法院最近支持这项法律,尽管它对类似的世俗做法有有利的影响。批评人士肯定会为这一结果喝彩。然而,将宗教活动置于世俗活动之上的做法很难与实质性中立相一致。与中立相反,自由是不对称的。它保护宗教自由,不管这样做是否附带地使宗教活动优于可比的世俗活动。本文认为,为了证明批评家自己关于宗教自由在美国民主中适当作用的规范性直觉是正确的,自由成分是必要的。
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期刊介绍: Hastings College of the Law was founded in 1878 as the first law department of the University of California, and today is one of the top-rated law schools in the United States. Its alumni span the globe and are among the most respected lawyers, judges and business leaders today. Hastings was founded in 1878 as the first law department of the University of California and is one of the most exciting and vibrant legal education centers in the nation. Our faculty are nationally renowned as both teachers and scholars.
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