Questioning Strict Separationism in Unsettled Times: Rethinking the Strict Separation of Church and State in United States Constitutional Law

Contemporary case law in the United States surrounding the establishment clause of the federal Constitution has entered a period of remarkable uncertainty. Now is an appropriate time to revisit the legal foundations of the Supreme Court’s seminal cases of <i>Everson v. Board of Education</i...

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Main Author: Joseph G. Prud’homme
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-09-01
Series:Laws
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/11/5/74
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author Joseph G. Prud’homme
author_facet Joseph G. Prud’homme
author_sort Joseph G. Prud’homme
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description Contemporary case law in the United States surrounding the establishment clause of the federal Constitution has entered a period of remarkable uncertainty. Now is an appropriate time to revisit the legal foundations of the Supreme Court’s seminal cases of <i>Everson v. Board of Education</i> (1947) and <i>McCollum v. Board of Education</i> (1948). These cases initiated the Court’s strict separationist construction of the establishment clause. In response to critics who see these cases as without judicial warrant, I argue that the holdings rest on a particular form of substantive due process. Further, I defend the methodology the Court deploys in these cases. Recognizing the legal foundations of <i>Everson</i> and <i>McCollum</i> and the tenability of the method the Court deploys in these cases improves our understanding of important Supreme Court case law. However, it also highlights new lines of critique of the Court’s strict separationist jurisprudence—a conclusion especially relevant today, given the Court’s willingness to revise long-standing precedents.
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spelling doaj.art-290523c998a841b9b9b5f447b7dd0b862023-11-24T00:55:08ZengMDPI AGLaws2075-471X2022-09-011157410.3390/laws11050074Questioning Strict Separationism in Unsettled Times: Rethinking the Strict Separation of Church and State in United States Constitutional LawJoseph G. Prud’homme0Department of Political Science and Director, Institute for Religion, Politics, and Culture, Washington College, Chestertown, MD 21620, USAContemporary case law in the United States surrounding the establishment clause of the federal Constitution has entered a period of remarkable uncertainty. Now is an appropriate time to revisit the legal foundations of the Supreme Court’s seminal cases of <i>Everson v. Board of Education</i> (1947) and <i>McCollum v. Board of Education</i> (1948). These cases initiated the Court’s strict separationist construction of the establishment clause. In response to critics who see these cases as without judicial warrant, I argue that the holdings rest on a particular form of substantive due process. Further, I defend the methodology the Court deploys in these cases. Recognizing the legal foundations of <i>Everson</i> and <i>McCollum</i> and the tenability of the method the Court deploys in these cases improves our understanding of important Supreme Court case law. However, it also highlights new lines of critique of the Court’s strict separationist jurisprudence—a conclusion especially relevant today, given the Court’s willingness to revise long-standing precedents.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/11/5/74church and stateestablishment clause<i>Everson</i><i>McCollum</i>separationismaccommodationism
spellingShingle Joseph G. Prud’homme
Questioning Strict Separationism in Unsettled Times: Rethinking the Strict Separation of Church and State in United States Constitutional Law
Laws
church and state
establishment clause
<i>Everson</i>
<i>McCollum</i>
separationism
accommodationism
title Questioning Strict Separationism in Unsettled Times: Rethinking the Strict Separation of Church and State in United States Constitutional Law
title_full Questioning Strict Separationism in Unsettled Times: Rethinking the Strict Separation of Church and State in United States Constitutional Law
title_fullStr Questioning Strict Separationism in Unsettled Times: Rethinking the Strict Separation of Church and State in United States Constitutional Law
title_full_unstemmed Questioning Strict Separationism in Unsettled Times: Rethinking the Strict Separation of Church and State in United States Constitutional Law
title_short Questioning Strict Separationism in Unsettled Times: Rethinking the Strict Separation of Church and State in United States Constitutional Law
title_sort questioning strict separationism in unsettled times rethinking the strict separation of church and state in united states constitutional law
topic church and state
establishment clause
<i>Everson</i>
<i>McCollum</i>
separationism
accommodationism
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/11/5/74
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