Law and Religion Headlines


Monday, 7 July 2014

Klitschko urges LGBT community to cancel gay parade in Kiev
(Interfax-Religion)

Russian patriarch won't go to Kiev for Metropolitan Vladimir's funeral
(Interfax-Religion)

Metropolitan Vladimir of Kiev and All Ukraine dies
(Interfax-Religion)

Trial between Episcopal church and breakaway Diocese to begin Tuesday
(Michael Gryboski, The Christian Post)

Atheist group seeks to give invocation at Texas city council meeting
(Michael Gryboski, The Christian Post)

Islamic militant group Hamas vows revenge on Israel after Gaza airstrikes kill seven
(Stoyan Zaimov, The Christian Post)

Power struggles in Middle East exploit Islam’s ancient sectarian rift
(David D. Kirkpatrick, The New York Times)

Saudis alert to enemies on both sides of Iraq schism
(Glen Carey, Bloomberg)

Court: Islamic law holds no legal sway in India
(Nirmala George, The Associated Press, The Big Story)

With arrest of six Jews in Arab teen’s killing, Israel confronts its own extremists
(Ruth Eglash, Sufian Taha, and Griff Witte, The Washington Post)

Twenty-two dead in attacks by militants on Kenyan coast
(Heidi Vogt, The Wall Street Journal)

Pope Francis asks victims of sex abuse for forgiveness
(Jim Yardley, The New York Times)

Baptist bishop who resigned after same-sex marriage finds new start
(Niraj Warikoo, Detroit Free Press)

Muslim children join their parents in fasting for Ramadan
(Michelle Boorstein, The Washington Post)

Methodist seminarians tend farm to grow own food, share with neighbors
(JoAnne Viviano, The Columbus Dispatch)

Preacher sues fair over free-speech skirmish
(Grant Rodgers, The Des Moines Register)

Nonprofits' contraceptive cases next for justices
(Mark Sherman and Rachel Zoll, The Associated Press, The Big Story)

For gay newlyweds in some states, ‘limbo’ may last another year
(David Masci, Pew Research Center)

The Economist explains: Why the French are so strict about Islamic head coverings
(S.P., The Economist Explains)

Uighurs defy Ramadan ban, China arrested 400 in crackdown
(World Bulletin/News Desk)

Theodicy in dialogue
(Mark S. M. Scott, OUPblog Religion)

The bayonet trumps the ballot in Thailand
(Jayantha Dhanapala, In Depth News)

Bangladesh: Withdraw restrictive draft law on NGOs, says HRW
(Eurasia Review)

Haj rule violations to cost airlines dearly
(Fouzia Khan, Arab News)

Christian leaders: Religious freedom at risk if Subianto wins presidential elections
(Mathias Hariyadi, AsiaNews.it)

EVENT, 7-9 July 2014: Religious Freedom in a Secular World [CLE event; early registration discount through June 12]
(International Center for Law and Religion Studies, Brigham Young University)

More on what the Wheaton College injunction does (and does not) mean for contraception coverage
(Jonathan H. Adler, The Volokh Conspiracy)

Sunday, 6 July 2014

Downwardly mobile for Jesus
(Lawrence Lanahan, Al Jazeera America)

'Caliph Ibrahim' demands obedience from Muslims
(Prahant Rao, Arab News)

India village council loosens iron grip on rural life
(Abhaya Srivastava, Arab News)

Dalai Lama urges Buddhists to halt attacks on Muslims
(Al Jazeera America)

Saudi rights lawyer jailed for 15 years
(Al Jazeera America)

Jihadist 'Caliph' demands Muslims' obedience in unprecedented appearance
(Agence France-Presse, Naharnet)

Iraq: Analyzing jihadist sermon video for authenticity
(Agence France-Presse, Naharnet)

Where was Justice Breyer in the Wheaton College fight? (Updated)
(Tom Goldstein, SCOTUSblog)

Religion and law round up – 6th July
(Frank Cranmer, Law & Religion UK)

Chinese curbs on Ramadan fasting spark huge protests
(P.K. Abdul Ghafour, Arab News)

Christians face increased risks in China
(Nathan VanderKlippe, The Globe and Mail)

Saturday, 5 July 2014

Egyptian court sentences Muslim Brotherhood leader to life in prison
(Al Jazeera America)

Gitmo detainees' lawyers invoke Hobby Lobby decision in court filing
(Philip J. Victor, Al Jazeera America)

In lawsuit, Connecticut man seeks health insurance without fee for coverage of abortions
(Randal Edgar, Providence Journal)

Panhandlers dressed as monks confound New Yorkers
(Joseph Goldstein and Jeffrey E. Singer, The New York Times)

Religious freedom protected
(Adelaide Mena, Orange Country Catholic)

EVENT, 4-12 July 2014: Michael Novak's 14th Annual Seminar in Slovakia. On the Fundamental Principles of Democracy and Current Challenges of Free Society
(Slovakia, Faith & Reason Institute and Collegium of Anton Neuwirth)

Supreme Court grants Wheaton College an injunction against contraception mandate accommodation
(Jonathan H. Adler, The Volokh Conspiracy)

Supreme Court sides with Christian college in birth control case
(Robert Barnes, The Washington Post)

The First Amendment decision nobody's talking about
(John Inazu, Christianity Today)

Ultra-orthodox Lev Tahor settlement has spurred tension in Guatemalan village, CIJA says
(Graeme Hamilton, National Post)

Celebrate religious liberty – Happy July 4!
(Don Byrd, Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty)

Our Faith and our Nation
(Mark Tooley, Juicy Ecumenism)

Commentary: Why I don’t think the Court’s Wheaton College decision rests on any misunderstanding of the law
(Tom Goldstein, SCOTUSblog)

Commentary: Is the Court’s attempt at a compromise order in Wheaton College based upon a misunderstanding of the law?
(Marty Lederman, SCOTUSblog)

Justice Sotomayor’s puzzling dissent in the Wheaton College case
(Mark L. Movsesian, Center for Law and Religion Forum at St. John's University School of Law)

In Scottsdale, Christianity, Judaism move in together
(Philip Haldiman, AZ Central)

Hillary's religious hobby
(Paul Kengor, The American Spectator)

These are America’s first churches — and they’re still worshipping
(Corrie Mitchell, Faith Street)

Prayer inspires action, creates unity in interfaith organizations
(Kelsey Dallas, Deseret National News)

Southern Democrats are out to prove that religion isn't just for Republicans
(Kelsey Dallas, Deseret News National Edition)

The homegrown jihadist
(Michael Cook, MercatorNet)

Pope Francis lauds testimony of working mothers
(Elise Harris, Catholic News Agency)

Georgia law allows guns in some schools, bars, churches
(Devon M. Sayers and Eliott C. McLaughlin, CNN)

Vatican’s UN envoy says bishop’s defrocking shows church takes abuse seriously
(Josephine McKenna, Religion News Service)

FBI: Colorado teen arrested for aiding ISIS
(Chris Caesar, Boston.com)

Fellow Christians threaten pro-Israel writer
(Russ Jones, One News Now)

China's Christians fear new persecution after latest wave of church demolitions
(Brice Pedroletti, The Guardian)

Over 40 Indian nurses to return home after ISIS capture
(Brownie Marie, Christian Today)

Ramadan adds extra pressure for N. African Christians
(Illia Djadi, World Watch Monitor)

Number of Orthodox up in Russia but only few go to church, pray regularly – poll
(Interfax-Religion)

Prominent Chinese pastor sentenced to 12 years in prison; lawyer claims accusation set-up by gov't
(Stoyan Zaimov, The Christian Post)

Texas officials call for help as waves of illegal immigrant children at US-Mexico border create 'refugee camps'
(Stoyan Zaimov, The Christian Post)

Should this pastor be deported? Church rallies behind NC preacher who lied about drug felony
(Jessica Martinez, The Christian Post)

Religious Freedom Project Facebook Page
(Georgetown University, The Berkley Center for Religion, Peace & World Affairs)

American religions born in the U.S.A. bring home the country's rich religious history
(Yasmine Hafix ("THe Huffington Post"), Worldwide Religious News)

Commission on Religion and Belief in British Public Life
(Frank Cranmer, Law & Religion UK)

The WCC: Seventy-five years in Geneva, 1939-2014
(World Council of Churches)

Moscow Patriarchate: Metropolitan Vladimir, primate of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church has died
(Nina Achmatova, AsiaNews.it)

The rise of Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses in the Caucasus
(Tara Isabella Burton, Al Jazeera America)

Manama: explosion in Shiite village kills police officer. Sunni authorities denounce "terrorism"
(AsiaNews.it)

Hong Kong, hundreds of arrests in aftermath of great march for democracy
(AsiaNews.it)

Non-Muslims told not to eat in public in Ramadan
(Arab News)

SAS v France and the face-veil ban: some initial reactions
(Frank Cranmer, Law & Religion UK)

European Human Rights Court to France: Do whatever you want
(Mark L. Movsesian, CLR Forum)

European Court of Human Rights fails to protect religious freedom
(FOREF Europe)

Euro Court's ban on French veil is biased
(Hajer Naili, WeNews: Religion)

Understanding the EU Human Rights Court's big ruling on France's headscarf ban
(Penelope Starr, UN Dispatch)

European Court of Human Rights upholds French ban on full-face veils
(National Secular Society, Richard Dawkins Foundation)

European court rules that France can maintain burqa ban
(Alison Lesley, World Religion News)

The Islamic veil across Europe
(BBC News Europe)

Friday, 4 July 2014

Algeria to reopen shuttered synagogues, gov’t minister says
(JTA)

Anti-Christian video clips did not create hostile work environment
(Howard Friedman, Religion Clause)

Supreme Court sides with Christian college in birth control battle
(Melissa Barnhart, The Christian Post)

Obama weighs steps to cover contraception
(Robert Pear and Adam Liptak, The New York Times)

Nazism and repentance: The contours of contrition
(B.C., The Economist [Erasmus: Religion and Public Policy])

As military patrols the Temple Mount, thousands attend funeral of Palestinian youth
(AsiaNews.it)

Going nuts in Nanaimo over Chick-fil-A
(Barry W. Bussey, Canadian Council of Christian Charities)

EU court scraps sanctions on Iranian university
(Majzooban Noor)

What should West expect from Erdogan as president?
(Semih Idiz, Al Monitor - The Pulse of the Middle East)

Egypt's Copts may soon regret supporting Sisi
(Joseph Fahim, Al Monitor - The Pulse of the Middle East)

Protestant pastor gets 12 years for opposing the seizure of church land
(AsiaNews.it)

Uzbekistan: "Legally" preventing human rights
(Mushfig Bayram, Forum 18)

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