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Sessions Information
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January 4, 2019
8:30 am - 10:15 am
Session Type: AALS Hot Topic Programs
Session Capacity: N/A
Location: Hilton New Orleans Riverside
Room: Grand Salon Section 10
Floor: First Floor
Should the government be able to
provide religious exemptions when they result in harm to third-parties? This
question is particularly weighty at this moment in American history when
religious exemptions have perhaps never been more controversial. In light of
recent Supreme Court cases like Hobby
Lobby and Masterpiece Cakeshop,
some scholars have advanced new theories that would place strict limits on
government’s ability to grant religious exemptions that result in harm (or
externalities) to third parties who do not benefit from that religious
practice. This program will explore the historical, theoretical, normative, and
doctrinal arguments for and against a rule that would prohibit religious
exemptions that result in more than de
minimis harm to identifiable third parties.
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Session Speakers
Brigham Young University, J. Reuben Clark Law School
Speaker
Brigham Young University, J. Reuben Clark Law School
Speaker
Wayne State University Law School
Speaker
The Wharton School University of Pennsylvania Legal Studies and Business Ethics Department
Speaker
Brooklyn Law School
Speaker
University of Illinois College of Law
Moderator
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Session Fees
- [4115] AALS Hot Topic Program - Religious Exemptions and Harm to Third Parties: $0.00
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