Here are some important law-and-religion news stories from around the web:
- An Eighth Circuit panel ruled in favor of a Minnesota hospital, interpreting Title VII to mean that a denial of a religious accommodation does not necessarily constitute retaliation.
- The FBI released its 2017 hate crime statistics, finding 20.6% of hate crimes are based on religion.
- The Freedom from Religion Foundation filed suit to contest a Wisconsin faith-based chaplaincy program in the Wisconsin Department of Justice.
- A jury awarded $3.2 million in damages to a Muslim man who claimed he was harassed and ultimately fired based on his religious beliefs.
- Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, announced the Vatican’s request for a delay on voting to approve new standards of conduct for bishops that could be reviewed by an outside commission.
- An Apostolic Pentecostal woman settled a lawsuit with a Mississippi restaurant, which refused to give her a religious accommodation from the restaurant’s dress code.
- In a letter to the Chinese government, United Nations human rights officials condemned regulations that seek to provide a legal basis for mass internment of Muslims in the Xinjiang region.
- The Charleston City Council passed the first reading of a hate crime ordinance, which would punish those who have the intent to intimidate another based on race, color, creed, religion, among others.
interest here at the Center for Law and Religion in the subject of tradition and its relationship to law, politics, culture, and religion. This book studies the nature of tradition as a source of interpretation and authority in Christianity specifically: