Document Type
Working Paper
Publication Date
3-23-2017
SSRN Discipline
PSN Subject Matter eJournals; LSN Subject Matter eJournals; Constitutional Law, Jurisprudence & Legal Philosophy eJournals; Political Behavior eJournals; Legal Scholarship Network; PRN Subject Matter eJournals; Philosophy Research Network; Conflict Studies eJournals; Law School Research Papers - Legal Studies; Law & Society eJournals; Law & Society: Public Law eJournals; Humanities Network; Political Science Network
Abstract
This Essay a contribution to a symposium on "Law and Religion in an Increasingly Polarized America" considers and critiques the constitutional status of the new wave of state "conscience" laws In the immediate wake of Obergefell a number of states began to consider enacting new "religious conscience" laws that would legally excuse refusals of service to LGBT persons The broadest of these proposed statutes such as Mississippi's House Bill 1523 would create a near absolute right for businesses open to the general public to discriminate against sexual minorities and transgender persons This Essay considers the constitutional status of such laws and posits that they stand on dubious constitutional ground First enactments of this sort violate the Equal Protection Clause by denying otherwise applicable legal protections to LGBT persons Second individuals and businesses that rely on these new enactments in order to discriminate against LGBT customers are arguably state actors when acting consistently with the state's encouragement under the "nexus" theory of state action and accordingly accountable under the Equal Protection Clause Third and finally even if such enactments are constitutionally valid government may not provide any targeted support to individuals or businesses that operate on a pervasively discriminatory basis against LGBT personsOn the other hand however some states have moved in the opposite direction enacting very broadly crafted antidiscrimination laws that require entities generally open to the public to refrain from discriminating against LGBT persons Difficult questions exist regarding the permissible scope of such enactments Just as government may not encourage private businesses to discriminate it may not regulate religious entities in the same way it may regulate supermarkets and gas stations A church synagogue or mosque stands outside the public marketplace or agora and has a right to maintain and enforce policies that reflect the tenets of the faith Just as the government may not encourage businesses open to the public to discriminate in ways that would be unlawful if enacted as a direct social regulation government may not require private religious communities to treat believers and nonbelievers on equal termsIn order to determine when religious entities have a constitutional right to be selfgoverning we must carefully disentangle the public sphere from the private sphere The state creates and maintains the agora or public marketplace and has the power to regulate access to it in order to promote the health safety welfare and morals of the community Just as the state may legislate to prevent and deter health nuisances such as fire hazards and unsanitary conditions it may also legislate to eradicate moral nuisances such as various forms of invidious discrimination This power to eradicate moral nuisances however cannot sweep so broadly or deeply as to deny selfconstituted communities of faith the ability to hold and practice the tenets of their faith outside the public marketplace To be sure drawing the line of demarcation between the truly public and the truly private will not be an easy undertaking Even so however it is an essential undertaking if we are to secure both equality and religious liberty in the contemporary United States
Recommended Citation
Ronald J. Krotoszynski Jr.,
Agora, Dignity, and Discrimination: On the Constitutional Shortcomings of 'Conscience' Laws that Promote Inequality in the Public Marketplace,
(2017).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.ua.edu/fac_working_papers/583