生态崇拜与联邦环境法

T. Hester
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摘要

随着越来越多的土地管理运动与福音派环保主义的兴起,宗教崇拜与生态保护交织在一起,引发了一种新型生态崇拜的兴起。鉴于美国最高法院最近愿意扩大对宗教活动的宪法保护,并削减针对政教分离条款挑战的壁垒,宗教申请人现在已经增强了基于其信仰自由而主张免于政府命令的权力。基于信仰的环境保护主义和机构宗教在私人环境保护中的作用日益增强,可能会导致类似的基于信仰的环保行动主义的宗教豁免要求。到目前为止,大多数法律研究都直接集中在联邦和州宪法法律如何适用于保护环境法律内外的宗教动机行为这一基本问题上。本文采取了不同的策略。联邦环境法主要是成文法,而州环境法也依赖于类似的基础。现在是通过新扩大的宪法视角重新解读这些法规的时候了。这条路径产生了两个显著的结果。首先,对宗教自由主张的更多包容和修订的政教分离条款的参数将不可避免地影响法院解释影响宗教活动的环境法规的方式。这种解释倾向在联邦和州法院有着深刻的历史渊源,尽管很难从圣三一教会诉美国案的巨大历史阴影中提取出来。其次,通过新的宗教活动视角改变对联邦法律条款的解释,可以赋予由宗教信仰推动的积极主动的环境倡议特殊地位,因为本质上是受保护的环境崇拜。这种重新解释的法定语言可以扩大某些提出联邦法定索赔的索赔人的立场,迫使联邦政府重新评估在某些情况下选择清理补救措施或环境许可限制的方式,重新定义环境正义政策的范围,并改变对宗教行为者使用土地进行环境保护的监管限制的程度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Ecoworship and Federal Environmental Law
As the growing land stewardship movement has joined with rising evangelical environmentalism, religious worship has intersected with ecological protection to spark the rise of a new variety of ecoworship. Given the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent willingness to expand constitu- tional protections for religious exercise and trim bulwarks against Establishment Clause challenges, religious claimants now have bolstered powers to assert exemptions from governmental mandates based on their free exercise of faith. The growing role of faith-based environmentalism and institutional religions in private environmental protection will likely lead to similar claims for religious exemptions for pro-environmental activism based on faith. Most legal scholarship so far has squarely focused on the general foundational question of how federal and state constitutional laws apply to protect religiously motivated actions both within and outside environmental law. This Article takes a different tack. Federal environmental law is over- whelmingly statutory, and state environmental laws rely on a similar base. It is time to re-read these statutes through the newly expanded constitutional lens. This path yields two notable results. First, the increased accommodation for Free Exercise claims and revamped Establishment Clause parameters will inevitably shape the way that courts will interpret environmental statutes that impinge on religious activities. This interpretive tendency has a deep historical provenance in federal and state courts, although it is difficult to extract from the outsized historical shadow of Holy Trinity Church v. United States. Second, an altered interpretation of federal statutory terms through the new religious exercise lens could grant special status to proactive environmental initiatives impelled by religious beliefs, as essentially protected environmental worship. This reinterpreted statutory language could expand standing for certain claimants raising federal statutory claims, force the federal government to reassess the way it selects clean-up remedies or environmental permit limits in certain contexts, redefine the scope of environmental justice policies, and alter the degree of regulatory limitations on environmentally protective uses of land by religious actors.
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