Oct 7 2024 Topics Federal Courts • Litigation • Religious Liberties Blog Post May Nonprofits Endorse or Oppose Candidates? Jeffery J. Ventrella For 70 years, the IRS has contended that the so-called Johnson Amendment proscribes any not-for-profit...
Jul 7 2022 Topics Litigation • Professional Responsibility & Legal Education • Religious Liberties Blog Post News Perlot v. Green: Free Expression in Law School Jeffery J. Ventrella One of the most contested arenas for free expression today continues to be . . ....
Mar 31 2021 Topics Religious Liberties Blog Post News Government Speech: From Courtesy to Coercion? Jeffery J. Ventrella Can a college student demand that a professor address them using “preferred personal pronouns”? Do...
Jan 7 2021 Topics Religious Liberties Blog Post News Mandatory Vaccinations For Continued Employment? Jeffery J. Ventrella Can an employer require its employees to be vaccinated in this era of COVID-19? What if the...
Aug 13 2020 Topics Supreme Court • Religious Liberties Blog Post What Is The Best Way to Deal With Increasing Disputes over Religious Liberty? Jeffery J. Ventrella Last term, the Supreme Court addressed several religious liberty-related matters in Bostock v. Clayton County,...
Mar 12 2020 Topics Free Speech & Election Law • Religious Liberties Blog Post News South Dakota Rejects Rule 8.4-inspired Effort Jeffery J. Ventrella Noting that opponents focused on the breadth of the proposed rule and its impact on...
Dec 12 2019 Topics Politics • Religious Liberties Blog Post News Religious Liberty is Not a Dead Right Jeffery J. Ventrella Religious liberty is not a dead or anachronistic parchment right; rather, it is a living...
Nov 7 2019 Topics Free Speech & Election Law • Religious Liberties Blog Post News Affirming Free Speech in Arizona Jeffery J. Ventrella In a refreshing and robust affirmation of free speech, the Arizona Supreme Court commenced its...
Aug 29 2019 Topics Free Speech & Election Law • Religious Liberties Blog Post News Telescope Media Group v. Lucero Decided: Religious Liberty in the 8th Circuit Jeffery J. Ventrella Assessing a pre-enforcement challenge, the 8th Circuit via Judge Stras protects religious liberty and conscience...
Jun 6 2019 Topics Culture • Telecommunications & Electronic Media Blog Post News Is SCOTUS Briefing Now Virtual and Crowd-sourced? Jeffery J. Ventrella In an intriguing law review article, two professors explore, as the abstract asserts, that the “open...
Topics
May Nonprofits Endorse or Oppose Candidates?
For 70 years, the IRS has contended that the so-called Johnson Amendment proscribes any not-for-profit...
Topics
Perlot v. Green: Free Expression in Law School
One of the most contested arenas for free expression today continues to be . . ....
Topics
Government Speech: From Courtesy to Coercion?
Can a college student demand that a professor address them using “preferred personal pronouns”? Do...
Topics
Mandatory Vaccinations For Continued Employment?
Can an employer require its employees to be vaccinated in this era of COVID-19? What if the...
Topics
What Is The Best Way to Deal With Increasing Disputes over Religious Liberty?
Last term, the Supreme Court addressed several religious liberty-related matters in Bostock v. Clayton County,...
Topics
South Dakota Rejects Rule 8.4-inspired Effort
Noting that opponents focused on the breadth of the proposed rule and its impact on...
Topics
Religious Liberty is Not a Dead Right
Religious liberty is not a dead or anachronistic parchment right; rather, it is a living...
Topics
Affirming Free Speech in Arizona
In a refreshing and robust affirmation of free speech, the Arizona Supreme Court commenced its...
Topics
Telescope Media Group v. Lucero Decided: Religious Liberty in the 8th Circuit
Assessing a pre-enforcement challenge, the 8th Circuit via Judge Stras protects religious liberty and conscience...
Topics
Is SCOTUS Briefing Now Virtual and Crowd-sourced?
In an intriguing law review article, two professors explore, as the abstract asserts, that the “open...