Law and Religion Headlines


Wednesday, 15 October 2014

"Birther" sues Obama claiming Ebola rules aid Muslim terrorism
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

Tuesday, 14 October 2014

Why the Islamic State is losing
(Michael Knights, Politico Magazine)

Larry Klayman is suing the federal government because of Ebola. Yes, really
(Abby Ohlheiser, The Washington Post)

Nepal: Drop sedition charges against Madhesi activist, says HRW
(Eurasia Review)

Yemen's Houthis take town of Hudeida
(Al Bawaba News)

Reshaping the Middle East: UAE leads the counter-revolution - analysis
(James M. Dorsey, Eurasia Review)

Saudi Arabia: Supporter or victim of ISIS?
(Omer Faruk Topal, The Journal of Turkish Weekly)

Srebrenica massacre and Islamophobia in Africa: Conscience… Apprehension and massacre…
(Fouad Farhaoui, The Journal of Turkish Weekly)

Rabbi Barry Freundel arrested — suspected of peeping on women in mikvah
(Josh Nathan-Kazis, Forward.com)

Women bishops approved by House of Lords
(John Bingham, The Telegraph)

City of Houston demands pastors turn over sermons
(Todd Starnes, Fox News)

Jakarta Police Chief: The Islamic Defence Front must be eliminated
(Mathias Hariyadi, AsiaNews.it)

Shasta County atheist to get $2 million for First Amendment violation
(Redding Record Searchlight)

Tibet, demolition campaign against the sacred places of Buddhism
(AsiaNews.it)

Almost 700,000 euros raised as the 'Adopt a Christian from Mosul' campaign continues
(Bernardo Cervellera, AsiaNews.it)

Supreme Court temporarily stays Texas abortion clinic restrictions
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

War on religion: Orthodox Christian priests, churchgoers face threats in Ukraine
(Russia Today)

North Carolina Supreme Court Speeds Up Appeal in School Voucher Suit
(Don Byrd, Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty)

Report: most DC voucher schools have religious affiliation
(Don Byrd, Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty)

Second judge nullifies North Carolina marriage ban
(Lyle Denniston, SCOTUSblog)

A stunning change
(James Martin, America Magazine)

German Catholics petition Schleswig-Holstein state to reinstate God in constitution
(Luigi Serenelli, Religion News Service)

Christian group to turn former abortion clinic into memorial garden
(David Yonke, Religion News Service)

Sukkah at high school rejected after other Jewish students raise church-state complaints
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

9th Circuit says same-sex marriages can go ahead in Idaho
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

North Carolina Supreme Court allows direct appeal of school voucher program
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

Minnesota archdiocese enters historic settlement in clergy abuse case
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

Satanic Temple tries again for Florida Capitol holiday display
(Henri Rose Cimatu, Ecumenical News)

Palestinian worshippers barred from Al-Aqsa
(Al Jazeera)

Ten US seminaries to receive $1.5 million to include science curricula
(Henri Rose Cimatu, Ecumenical News)

Rights group urges Malaysia not to deport Uighurs back to China
(Miko Morelos, Ecumenical News)

Pope includes plight of Middle East Christians in October 20 agenda
(Miko Morelos, Ecumenical News)

Diversity, inequality and gentrification in inner London, and the Black Majority Church response
(Richard Reddie, Publicspirit)

Under conservative assault, Vatican backtracks on gay comments
(Delia Gallagher and Daniel Burke, CNN)

It is time to begin developing a system of Islamic education within the country's religious institutions - FSB chief
(Interfax-Religion)

'Islamism may have spread to schools beyond Birmingham' warns investigator
(Carey Lodge, Christian Today)

Shia rebels seize control of port city and province in Yemen
(The Guardian)

Palestinians clash with Israeli police at Jerusalem's al-Aqsa compound
(Reuters)

Alaska gay couples apply for marriage licenses after judge drops ban
(Steve Quinn, Reuters)

How churches are slowly becoming less segregated
(Laura Mechler, The Wall Street Journal)

Constructing the secular : law and religion jurisprudence in Europe and the United States
(Zachary T. Calo, EUI Working Paper September 2014)

FRA recognised for its outstanding work on combating violence against women
(European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights)

The Chechnya conflict
(John Dyck, Geopolitical Monitor)

Turkey: Nationalist leader says HDP violates constitution with support for PKK violence
(Hürriyet Daily News)

British Palestine motion undermines peace, Israeli Embassy says
(JTA)

Kazakhstan: "New forms of countering religious activity by non-traditional religious movements"
(Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service)

The who?! Europe’s lesser-known ethnic minorities
(Sophie Kirby, Deutsche Welle)

Serbian Ambassador criticizes the West for lack of attention to the problem of destroying churches in Kosovo
(Interfax-religion)

Cross, crucifix, culture: an approach to the constitutional meaning of confessional symbols
(Frederick Mark Gedicks and Pasquale Annicchino, EUI Working Paper RSCAS 2013/88)

The end-of-life battle over Jewish souls
(Paul Berger, The Jewish Daily Forward)

Tunisian Jews may vote for Islamists, prominent community member says
(JTA)

Ninth Circuit’s neutrality questioned on gay rights
(Lyle Denniston, SCOTUSblog)

U.K. parliament passes non-binding motion to recognize Palestinian state
(Anshel Pfeffer and Haaretz, Haaretz)

Proposed law on "child brides" bows to conservative Islam
(Sumon Corraya, AsiaNews.it)

Monday, 13 October 2014

Russian civil rights group Memorial condemn authorities’ attack on their work
(Caucasus Equality News Network)

Secularism at risk in Sub-Saharan secular states: the challenges for Senegal and Mali
(Fatou Sow, 50.50 inclusive democracy)

Call for Bangladesh to not lower marriage age
(Eurasia Review)

Satyarthi and Malala, their Nobel for Christian children in Kandhamal
(Nirmala Carvalho, AsiaNews.it)

Local churches respond to same-sex marriages
(Deanne Coffin, KPVI News 6)

Minnesota churches settle clergy abuse lawsuit
(Amy Forliti and James Nord, AP, 8 News Now)

Once more, same-sex marriages allowed in Idaho
(Lyle Denniston, SCOTUSblog)

Sears removes swastika ring for sale on website
(JTA)

China sentences 12 to death for Xinjiang violence
(ABC News)

A farewell to beards: Men shaving to avoid jihadist stigma in southeast Turkey
(Hürriyet Daily News)

Synod14: Full Text of Relatio Post Disceptationem
(Delivered by the General Rapporteur, Cardinal Péter Erdő, Zenit: The world seen from Rome)

Synod on the Family: Could the Catholic Church be liberalising on divorce, contraception and homosexuality?
(Ruth Gledhill, Christian Today)

Synod interim report: the Church can renew commitment to family
(Andrea Gagliarducci, ETWN)

The Vatican, gays and the family: A sea change
(B.C., The Economist [Erasmus: Religion and Public Policy])

What the Vatican really said about homosexuality
(Elizabeth Dias, Time)

A ‘Pastoral Earthquake:’ Catholic Church proposes extraordinary shift on gays and lesbians
(Judd Legum, Mint Press News)

A new welcome for gay Catholics in the church
(Francis DeBernardo, CNN Belief Blog)

Vatican stuns Catholic world with greater openness toward gays and lesbians
(Josephine McKenna, Religion News Service)

Vatican proposes "stunning" shift on gays, lesbians
(Delia Gallagher, CNN Belief Blog)

Khamenei blames U.S., Zionism, and 'wicked' Britain for creating Islamic State
(Michelle Moghtader, Reuters)

Joshua Landis on ISIS, Syria & the "Great Sorting Out" in the Middle East - Interview with Danny Postel
(Joshua Landis, Syria Comment)

Christian T-Shirt company in Kentucky told its refusal to print gay pride T-shirts constituted 'unlawful discrimination'
(Cath Martin, Christian Today)

Kafka was the rage: At a Catholic school, a professor fighting the academic boycott of Israel is investigated on secret charges
(Doron Ben-Atar, Tablet: A New Read on Jewish Life)

New York school reverses ban on Christian club after students' bold stand
(Cath Martin, Christian Today)

Study: Miami Jewry sees first increase since 1975
(Uriel Heilman, JTA)

Declining number of U.S. nuns, even among traditional orders, charted in new study
(David Gibson, Religion News Service)

Female imams have important role in China
(China Daily)

China: Experts point to poverty, illiteracy, injustice as keys to cults’ ongoing attraction
(The People's Daily)

Clergy among dozens arrested on final day of 'Ferguson October' protests
(Chris McGreal, The Guardian)

In ‘Moral Monday,’ activists protest Brown shooting with acts of civil disobedience
(Wesley Lowery and Arelis R. Hernández, The Washington Post)

Notre Dame asks for Supreme Court GVR in contraceptive coverage challenge
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

President Erdoğan slams modern 'Lawrences of Arabia' in Middle East
(Agence France-Presse, Hürriyet Daily News)

Jewish girls want to read from the Torah at the Western Wall, new bus ads proclaim
(Michele Chabin, Religion News Service)

Israeli institute gets $2.2 million to help Christians study Jewish thought
(Sarah Pulliam Bailey, Religion News Service)

Seven CA churches sue to keep from funding abortion
(Charlie Butts, One News Now)

Children abused amid climate of fear at pentecostal school, commission hears
(The Guardian)

Nigeria: Why we must resist the impulse of "on to the next thing"
(Dwayne Leslie, Huff Post Religion)

Mansur Yalçın v. Turkey: religious education and the (easy) way out
(Strasbourg Observers)

Moscow Patriarchate urges to stop violence and threats against canonical Ukrainian Church
(Interfax-religion)

Anger as minister says Christian, Muslim dalits should be denied job quotas [India]
(Rito Sharma, UCA news)

RC bishops blame collapse of marriage on the economy
(Simon Caldwell, Church Times)

Austria refuses to ban Rabaa sign of solidarity with anti-coup Egyptians
(Middle East Monitor)

Pastor awaits trial before Islamic court for collaborating with Syrian government
(Barbara G. Baker, World Watch Monitor)

Religion and law round-up – 12th October
(Frank Cranmer, Law & Religion UK)

Rowan Williams: Don't let secularists drive religion out of public life
(Mark Woods, Christian Today)

Enforcement of Israeli child support order does not violate Establishment Clause
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

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