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1397
THE NEW RELIGION AND THE CONSTITUTION
Kathleen M. Sullivan ?
With her unerring sense for important topics, her characteristic optimism
and decency, and her capacious instinct for bridge-building
across what others might see as unleapable chasms or divides, Martha
Minow depicts in her article a world in which social services may be
devolved from government to private providers without too great a
loss of public values. She includes religious organizations among the
private providers that may participate in joint public-private ventures
to educate children, rehabilitate substance abusers, and furnish health
care to the poor. And she would hold these partnerships to such public
values as “individual freedom of belief and expression,
. . . opportunities for fair hearings by impartial decisionmakers, and
freedom from exclusion or inferior treatment on the basis of race, national
origin, ethnicity, language, gender, disability, religion, and, increasingly,
sexual orientation.” 1
Under prevailing conceptions of freedom of speech, association, and
religious practice, however, such public conditions could not be imposed
upon religious associations by regulatory fiat. May government
use contracts and vouchers to bribe religious entities into a docility
and public-mindedness it may not compel through fines and prohibitions?
That is the tension at the heart of this Commentary. 2
Many religious organizations would hardly espouse such public
values voluntarily if left to their own devices. Religions, like other
private associations, are often biased, intolerant, exclusionary, zealous,
and insular, comprising at best “partial publics” 3 — partial in both
senses of the word, universal in neither scope nor values. What would
it mean to infuse such entities with public values? Does Minow's proposal
require that, as the price of entering into government contracts
or accepting public subsidies, the Catholic Church must admit women
as priests? That Jewish schools must offer admission to Islamic fundamentalist
students? That the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints may not expel contemporary polygamists as heretics without a
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? Dean and Richard E. Lang Professor of Law and Stanley Morrison Professor of Law, Stanford
Law School . The author thanks Roberto J. Gonzalez for indispensable research assistance.
1 Martha Minow, Public and Private Partnerships: Accounting for the New Religion , 116
H ARV . L. R EV . 1229, 1261 (2003).
2 Participation in public-private ventures by for-profit associations is beyond the scope of this
Comment, and that of nonreligious private associations will be discussed only by analogy.
3 N ANCY L. R OSENBLUM , M EMBERSHIP AND M ORALS : T HE P ERSONAL U SES OF
P LURALISM IN A MERICA 43 (1998).
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1398 HARVARD LAW REVIEW [Vol. 116:1397
full panoply of procedural protections? Imposition of such conditions
by law would violate basic conceptions of religious autonomy long
shielded by the Free Exercise Clause. 4 What would the world of private
religious association look like if such conditions were introduced
through the inducement of public funding instead? Where is the tipping
point at which a religious entity ceases to be normatively or epistemically
distinct and joins a secular common ground that obscures its
reason for associational autonomy in the first place?
The Supreme Court did not settle such questions in its decision last
Term in Zelman v. Simmons-Harris , 5 which upheld against Establishment
Clause challenge an Ohio program permitting parents to redeem
publicly funded education vouchers at pervasively and unabashedly
sectarian religious schools. 6 To be sure, Zelman provides constitutional
leeway for part of Minow's proposal by holding that government may
provide at least some kinds of public subsidies to religious organizations
whose faiths it may not proclaim or endorse outright. But the
decision emphasized that Cleveland 's program involved the “genuine”
or “independent” private choices of individuals that acted as an intervening
cause or “circuit breaker” between church and state. 7 Zelman
thus does not bless all forms of public-private partnerships on Minow's
helpful “continuum of relationships between government and
private groups.” 8 Direct contractual intertwinement between government
and religious providers might well be found unconstitutional after
Zelman as it was before. 9
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4 To be sure, the Supreme Court has curtailed the scope under the Free Exercise Clause of
religious exemptions from facially neutral, generally applicable laws. See Employment Div. v.
Smith, 494 U.S. 872, 890 (1990) (upholding against free exercise challenge, on mere rational basis
review, the denial of unemployment benefits to Native Americans who used peyote in violation of
the state's general criminal laws). But Smith did not overrule earlier decisions protecting the
autonomy of church organizations over their internal affairs, see infra notes Error! Bookmark
not defined.–Error! Bookmark not defined., nor is it clear that even the author of Smith
would lightly consider it permissible under the Free Exercise Clause to enforce antidiscrimination
laws so as to require churches to violate their own theologies. Cf. Tex. Monthly, Inc. v. Bullock,
489 U.S. 1, 42 (1989) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (arguing that a sales tax exemption for Bibles and
other sacred books, held by the Court to violate the Establishment Clause, rather “comes so close
to being a constitutionally required accommodation, there is no doubt that it is at least a permissible
one”).
5 122 S. Ct. 2460 (2002).
6 Id. at 2473.
7 See id. at 2467 (reasoning that where “parents [are] the ones to select a religious school as
the best learning environment for their . . . child, the circuit between government and religion [is]
broken, and the Establishment Clause [is] not implicated”).
8 Minow, supra note 1, at 1255.
9 Compare Freedom from Religion Found., Inc. v. McCallum, 179 F. Supp. 2d 950, 982 (W.D.
Wis. 2002) (holding that Wisconsin 's direct funding of Faith Works, a faith-based alcohol and
drug treatment program, violates the Establishment Clause), with Freedom from Religion Found.,
Inc. v. McCallum, 214 F. Supp. 2d 905, 920 (W.D. Wis. 2002) (upholding a voucher-like arrang e S ULLIVAN
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True too, the Cleveland voucher plan upheld in Zelman exemplifies
Minow's approach as a matter of policy. Minow argues that religious
recipients of public subsidies should be bound by strong public norms
of accountability and nondiscrimination. The Cleveland plan, in keeping
with such an approach, permitted public funds to be transferred to
religious schools only with public strings attached: “Participating private
schools must agree not to discriminate on the basis of race, religion,
or ethnic background, or to ‘advocate or foster unlawful behavior
or teach hatred of any person or group on the basis of race, ethnicity,
national origin, or religion.'” 10 But Zelman did not reach the question
whether such conditions on funding were either required by the Establishment
Clause or forbidden by the Free Exercise or Free Speech
Clauses. 11 Nor did it reach the question of the permissible scope of
such conditions, or whether the leverage thus obtained for public values
over religious education might extend also to other activities by a
beneficiary church. And it did not reach any judgment about the longterm
political effects of conditioned public aid to religious schools; as
the dissenters in Zelman ominously cautioned, 12 such conditions themselves
might well occasion future intersectarian contests and religious
divisiveness. Zelman thus leaves Minow's approach open to continued
political and constitutional scrutiny.
In considering Minow's proposal in light of these concerns, this
Commentary begins by recapping briefly the role of private associations,
including religious associations, in American political life. See
Part I below. It then lays out a taxonomy of four possible understandings
of the general relationship of religious associations to government,
each drawing on different joint interpretations of the two Religion
Clauses. See Part II below. Finally, it relates Minow's proposal to
that taxonomy, and considers how Minow's proposal of governmentreligious
partnerships with public strings attached compares with two
possible alternative policies: a decision to forego such joint ventures
altogether in favor of strict separation of public services and religion,
or a decision to embrace such joint ventures but without public strings
attached. See Part III below.
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ment whereby the Wisconsin Department of Corrections would refer offenders to Faith Works
and pay per offender).
10 Zelman , 122 S. Ct. at 2463 (quoting O HIO R EV . C ODE A NN . § 3313.976(A)(6) (Baldwin
1999 & Supp. 2002)).
11 For review of possible post- Zelman constitutional issues surrounding conditions on religious
providers in voucher-financed programs, see Ira C. Lupu & Robert W. Tuttle, Zelman 's Future:
Vouchers, Sectarian Providers, and the Next Round of Constitutional Battles (unpublished manuscript,
on file with the Harvard Law School Library), available at http://www.religionand
socialpolicy.org/docs/legal/reports/10-21-2002_gwu_zelmans_future.pdf (last visited Feb. 3, 2003).
12 See Zelman , 122 S. Ct. at 2501–02 (Souter, J., dissenting); id. at 2505–08 (Breyer, J., dissenting).