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Table of Contents
1: Introduction
Part 1: Religion and State in Philosophy
Chapter 2: Religious Reasons in Political Discourse
Chapter 3: A Plantingan Response to Public Reason Accessibilism
Chapter 4: Matters of Conscience
Chapter 5: On the Definition of Religious Belief
Chapter 6: Natural Law and the American Founding
Part 2: Religion and the American Constitutional Experiment
Chapter 7: Why Do We Think the Framers Wanted to Separate Church and State?- Chapter 8: American Church State Relations: Jeffersons Conception of Religious Freedom
Chapter 9: A Liberal and Generous Toleration: John Adams and the Freedom for Religion
Chapter 10: Nondiscrimination or Accommodation?: Two Competing Visions of the Free Exercise Clause
Chapter 11: In Praise of Separationism: A Lamentation on the Demise of that Famous Paragraph in Everson v. Board of Education
Chapter 12: The Requirement of Church and State to be Forever Separate
Chapter 13: Why Church and State Should be Kept Separate but Politics and Religion Should Not
Chapter 14: Is Religion Serious Enough to Be Taken Seriously?- Chapter 15: Does the Separation of Church and State Require Secularism?- Chapter 16: Miltonic Liberty and the Grounds for Disestablishment in A Treatise of Civil Power
Chapter 17: A Marriage of Opposites: Tocqueville on Religion and Democracy
Chapter 18: Public Spirit as Mediating Influence Between Tocquevilles Spirit of Religion and Spirit of Freedom
Part 3: Religion and Law in the American Courts
Chapter 19: Testing Neutrality: The Courts Use of Legal Tests in Determining Establishment and Free Exercise Cases
Chapter 20: Corporate Religious Liberty After Hobby Lobby
Chapter 21: The Ministerial Exception and the Distinction between Church and State
Chapter 22: The Definition of Marriage from Reynolds to Obergefell
Chapter 23: The Separation of Church and State: The Courts Secular Purpose and the Argumentum ex Ignorantia
Chapter 24: Changes in Conscience Clauses and the Effect on Religious Affiliated Hospitals and Health Care Practitioners
Chapter 25: Title: A Very Private, Very Public Matter: Contraception and Religious Freedom
Chapter 26: Religion and Education: A New Birth of Freedom for Unsettled Times
Chapter 27: The Global State Church: The Political and Security Roles of Religion in Contemporary Education
Chapter 28: Sexual Identity, Gender Ideology, and Religious Freedom: The Tug of War over Who We Are Schools as Battlegrounds
Part 4: Religion and the State in Canada, Mexico, and South America
Chapter 29: Religion and State in Canada Janet Epp Buckingham
Chapter 30: Religion and State in Mexico Roberto Blancart
Chapter 31: Religion and State in Colombia
Chapter 32: Religion and State in Argentina
Chapter 33: Religion and State in Brazil Rodrigo Alves, The Brazilian Center of Studies in Law and Religion
Chapter 34: Religion and State in Chile
Chapter 35: Religion and State in the Caribbean.
Part 1: Religion and State in Philosophy
Chapter 2: Religious Reasons in Political Discourse
Chapter 3: A Plantingan Response to Public Reason Accessibilism
Chapter 4: Matters of Conscience
Chapter 5: On the Definition of Religious Belief
Chapter 6: Natural Law and the American Founding
Part 2: Religion and the American Constitutional Experiment
Chapter 7: Why Do We Think the Framers Wanted to Separate Church and State?- Chapter 8: American Church State Relations: Jeffersons Conception of Religious Freedom
Chapter 9: A Liberal and Generous Toleration: John Adams and the Freedom for Religion
Chapter 10: Nondiscrimination or Accommodation?: Two Competing Visions of the Free Exercise Clause
Chapter 11: In Praise of Separationism: A Lamentation on the Demise of that Famous Paragraph in Everson v. Board of Education
Chapter 12: The Requirement of Church and State to be Forever Separate
Chapter 13: Why Church and State Should be Kept Separate but Politics and Religion Should Not
Chapter 14: Is Religion Serious Enough to Be Taken Seriously?- Chapter 15: Does the Separation of Church and State Require Secularism?- Chapter 16: Miltonic Liberty and the Grounds for Disestablishment in A Treatise of Civil Power
Chapter 17: A Marriage of Opposites: Tocqueville on Religion and Democracy
Chapter 18: Public Spirit as Mediating Influence Between Tocquevilles Spirit of Religion and Spirit of Freedom
Part 3: Religion and Law in the American Courts
Chapter 19: Testing Neutrality: The Courts Use of Legal Tests in Determining Establishment and Free Exercise Cases
Chapter 20: Corporate Religious Liberty After Hobby Lobby
Chapter 21: The Ministerial Exception and the Distinction between Church and State
Chapter 22: The Definition of Marriage from Reynolds to Obergefell
Chapter 23: The Separation of Church and State: The Courts Secular Purpose and the Argumentum ex Ignorantia
Chapter 24: Changes in Conscience Clauses and the Effect on Religious Affiliated Hospitals and Health Care Practitioners
Chapter 25: Title: A Very Private, Very Public Matter: Contraception and Religious Freedom
Chapter 26: Religion and Education: A New Birth of Freedom for Unsettled Times
Chapter 27: The Global State Church: The Political and Security Roles of Religion in Contemporary Education
Chapter 28: Sexual Identity, Gender Ideology, and Religious Freedom: The Tug of War over Who We Are Schools as Battlegrounds
Part 4: Religion and the State in Canada, Mexico, and South America
Chapter 29: Religion and State in Canada Janet Epp Buckingham
Chapter 30: Religion and State in Mexico Roberto Blancart
Chapter 31: Religion and State in Colombia
Chapter 32: Religion and State in Argentina
Chapter 33: Religion and State in Brazil Rodrigo Alves, The Brazilian Center of Studies in Law and Religion
Chapter 34: Religion and State in Chile
Chapter 35: Religion and State in the Caribbean.