Vol. 139 No. 7 In December 2025, without oral argument or a written opinion, the Supreme Court did something it had never done before: It set aside a lower court judgment upholding a vaccine mandate that lacked religious exemptions. In Miller v. McDonald...
Response to Antisemitism, Anti-Zionism, and Title VI: A Guide for the Perplexed
Vol. 139 No. 2 After the attack on Israel of October 7, 2023, a new protest movement erupted on America’s campuses. Unlike the protests of previous decades, these...
Vol. 139 No. 1 The past eighteen months have seen an unprecedented wave of claims by public officials and private plaintiffs that universities are violating their legal obligations...
Vol. 138 No. 3 Introduction When visitors enter the Grand Mosque (est. 1396 CE) — the center of communal Friday Prayers — of Bursa, Türkiye, they are greeted by a strange sight....
Vol. 137 No. 2 Although she was the only woman working at the Rent-A-Center, Natasha Jackson was optimistic about her career as an account executive in South Carolina....
Vol. 137 No. 1 Religious practice and disability are two of the only three statuses for which federal law protects the right to workplace accommodations. For both, the...
Vol. 135 No. 2 Until well into the twentieth century, American law recognized blasphemy as proscribable speech. The blackletter rule was clear. Constitutional liberty entailed a right to...