美国印第安人宗教自由的限制原则和授权实践

Kristen A. Carpenter
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引用次数: 4

摘要

就业司诉史密斯案是第一修正案的分水岭,最高法院认为,具有普遍适用性的中立法规不能妨碍宗教自由。国会随后通过《恢复宗教自由法》和《宗教土地使用与制度化人员法》,通过立法和行政程序恢复对宗教活动的法律保护,受到法律学者的极大关注。然而,在这场谈话中,处于史密斯案件中心的美洲印第安人却被遗忘了。事实上,对他们来说,将拥有佩奥特圣礼定为犯罪的决定,只是最高法院否决美国印第安人自由行使条款主张的一系列案件中的最后一个。此外,最高法院审理的印第安人案件有一个共同的、以前被忽视的特点:在所有这些案件中,法院都认为印第安人的主张过于宽泛或过于特殊,不值得行使自由条款的保护,而是通过一系列明确的表述否定了这些主张。本文确定了对“限制原则”的不求回报的搜索作为分析的基础,重新评估了宗教案例以及制度主义和平等的潜在理论问题,在他们的印度背景下。然后,它确定了两个当代政策转变——即国会决定将印第安人宗教自由的调解委托给联邦机构,以及它决定在部落而不是个人层面上这样做——这在某些方面促进了后史密斯时代美国印第安人宗教自由的“授权实践”方法。本文采用描述性和情境性的方法,阐明了在美洲印第安人的背景下进行进一步法律改革的机会,以及宗教自由法中制度主义、平等和多元化的更大问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Limiting Principles and Empowering Practices in American Indian Religious Freedoms
Employment Division v. Smith was a watershed moment in First Amendment law, with the Supreme Court holding that neutral statutes of general applicability could not burden the free exercise of religion. Congress's subsequent attempts, including the passage of Religious Freedom Restoration Act and Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, to revive legal protections for religious practice through the legislative and administrative process have received tremendous attention from legal scholars. Lost in this conversation, however, have been the American Indians at the center of the Smith case. Indeed, for them, the decision criminalizing the possession of their peyote sacrament was only the last in a series of Supreme Court cases denying American Indian Free Exercise Clause claims. Moreover, the Supreme Court's Indian cases share a common and previously overlooked feature: in all of them, the Court assessed the Indian claims as too broad or too idiosyncratic to merit Free Exercise Clause protection and instead denied them through a succession of bright line formulations. Identifying the unrequited search for a “limiting principle” as a basis for analysis, this Article reassesses the religion cases and underlying theoretical questions of institutionalism and equality, in their Indian context. It then identifies two contemporary policy shifts-namely Congress's decision to entrust accommodation of Indian religious freedoms to federal agencies and its decision to do so at the tribal, versus individual, level-that have, in some respects, facilitated an “empowering practices” approach to American Indian religious liberties in the post-Smith era. Taking a descriptive and contextual approach, the Article illuminates opportunities for additional law reform in the American Indian context and also larger questions of institutionalism, equality, and pluralism in religious freedoms law.
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