Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Race Relations :: essays research papers
 1  Race Relations and Modern Church-State Relations  Thomas C. Berg*  This article concerns religion and race ââ¬â two controversial  subjects that have figured prominently in Americaââ¬â¢s constitutional  and political debates since World War II. In particular, I wish to  trace some connections in the last 50 years between developments  in church-state relations and developments in race relations.  Recently scholars of the First Amendmentââ¬â¢s Religion Clauses have  shown interest in how the Supreme Courtââ¬â¢s modern decisions on  that subject might have been influenced by the political, social, and  cultural context of recent decades: such factors as the changing  attitudes toward Roman Catholicism,1 the rise of secularism in  culture,2 the position of religious minorities,3 and so forth. Like  some of that other work, this Article traces the course of churchstate  relations not only in the Court itself, but in the broader  society.  It would hardly be surprising if developments concerning  church and state in the last 50 years interacted with developments  in the area of race, since the latter have been so central to  * Professor of Law, University of St. Thomas School of Law (Minneapolis). I  presented portions of the material here at the Boston College Law Review  Symposium on Separation of Church and State, in April 2002; at a Federalist  Society program on ââ¬Å"Faith Under Democracy,â⬠ in March 2002; at a summer  2001 symposium on Spirituality and Social Justice, sponsored by a grant from  the Lilly Endowment; and to a fall 2001 meeting of the Colloquium on Religion  and Philosophy at Samford University. I thank David Bains, Hugh Floyd,  Penny Marler, [OTHERS], and the participants in those sessions for their  comments on the various versions of the paper.  1See, e.g., John C. Jeffries, Jr., and James A. Ryan, A Political History of the  Establishment Clause, 100 Mich. L. Rev. 279 (2001); Thomas C. Berg, Anti-  Catholicism and Modern Church-State Relations, 33 Loyola U-Chi. L. Rev. 121  (2001); Douglas Laycock, The Underlying Unity of Separation and Neutrality,  46 Emory L. J. 43, __-__ (1997).  2See George W. Dent, Jr., Secularism and the Supreme Court, 1999 B.Y.U. L.  Rev. 1.  3See Stephen M. Feldman, Religion-Clause Revisionism: Minorities and the  Development of Religious Freedom (unpublished draft, on file with author).  2  constitutional law and moral-political debate ââ¬â from the  constitutional success of Brown v. Board of Education4 to the  moral-political triumph of the civil rights movement to the current  conflicts over how to define and achieve racial justice.  The central story in church-state relations in the last 50  years has been the rise of a fairly strict separation of church and  state as the overriding constitutional and moral ideal in the 1960s  and 1970s, and the partial decline of that ideal from the 1980s    					    
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