by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Aug 25, 2023 | Volume 74, Issue 6
Ellen P. Aprill Volume 74, Issue 6, 1555-1620 The standard view of the relationship between government and the nonprofit charitable sector treats them as separate and distinct. But they are not. Numerous federal agencies have statutory authority to receive...
by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Aug 25, 2023 | Volume 74, Issue 6
Mark D. Rosen Volume 74, Issue 6, 1621-1682 In a recent decision, the Supreme Court held that “the founding generation took as a given” that states would be constitutionally immune to suit in the courts of sister states, overruling an earlier ruling that interstate...
by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Aug 25, 2023 | Volume 74, Issue 6
Robert A. Destro Volume 74, Issue 6, 1683-1750 “Constitutional lawsuits are the stuff of power politics in America. The Court may be, and usually is, above party politics and personal politics, but the politics of power is a most important and delicate function, and...
by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Aug 25, 2023 | Volume 74, Issue 6
Andrew Koppelman Volume 74, Issue 6, 1751-1762 Today’s Supreme Court is so predisposed to find discrimination against religion that it declared it to be present in a case where the discriminator was obeying the Court’s own commands. In Kennedy v. Bremerton School...
by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Aug 25, 2023 | Volume 74, Issue 6
Ira C. Lupu & Robert W. Tuttle Volume 74, Issue 6, 1763-1812 The very first words of the Bill of Rights mark religion as constitutionally distinctive. Congress may not enact laws respecting an establishment of religion—in particular, acts of worship, religious...
by technology@hastingslawjournal.org | Aug 25, 2023 | Volume 74, Issue 6
John Witte, Jr. & Eric Wang Volume 74, Issue 6, 1813-1848 The U.S. Supreme Court has entered decisively into a new fourth era of American religious freedom. In the first era, from 1776 to 1940, the Court largely left governance of religious freedom to the...