Religion on Trial: A Handbook with Cases, Laws, and DocumentsFrom colonial times to the present, an insightful examination of how courts have determined the extent to which religion is accommodated in American public life.
This volume chronicles such groundbreaking cases as the 1991 decision ordering blood transfusions for children of Christian Scientists in Norwood Hospital v. Munoz and the infamous case, Engel v. Vitale, that banned prayer in schools and ignited calls for Chief Justice Earl Warren's impeachment. The work addresses such inflammatory contemporary disputes as prayer in schools, allegiance to the flag, and the display of religious symbols on public property, and the impact they have had on American society.
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The courts have even held that schools enforcing a moment of silence in classrooms to encourage individual prayer is unconstitutional. The Supreme Court has also recognized, however, that students as individuals have a constitutional ...
Although some parents object to any religious observance in the classroom, others feel that excluding religious activities creates an atmosphere that has contributed to the moral decline of the citizenry. Congressional and presidential ...
For example, if a state legislature passes a law permitting Bible reading in the classroom, this must give way to a federal law or court decision banning the practice. Because religion in the school issues involve basic constitutionally ...
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