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On January 12, 2010 the Center for Religion and Public Affairs at Wake Forest University School of Divinity released a statement titled Religious Expression in American Life: A Joint Statement of Current Law. The document was released at the Brookings Institution.
A diverse working group of church-state experts, including IRCV Founding Director Shabbir Mansuri, drafted the document. The joint statement stemmed from a leadership gathering hosted in October 2005 by the McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum and the First Amendment Center called "The Future of Religious Freedom in America".
This project began several years ago when the Freedom Forum’s First Amendment Center and the McCormick Tribune Freedom Museum hosted a discussion about the future of religious freedom. At the conference, participants discussed some ways in which earlier joint statements
on church-state issues had helped to advance public understanding of
the rules governing religious expression in public schools and in the
federal workplace. Conference participants agreed that it would be
useful to draft another joint statement of current law, this one
addressing some issues related to religious expression in the wider
public square. Project supervisor Melissa Rogers suggested that the participants pursue
the project under the auspices of the Wake Forest University Divinity
School’s Center for Religion and Public Affairs.
The drafters’ purpose in crafting this statement is to help foster an
accurate understanding of current law and improve our national dialogue
on these issues. While there is disagreement among the drafters about
the merits of some of the court decisions and laws mentioned in the
document, the drafters agree that current law protects the rights of
people to express their religious convictions and practice their faiths
on government property and in public life as described in the
statement. In other words, while this diverse group often disagrees
about how the law should address issues regarding the intersection of religion and government, it agrees in many cases on what the law is
today. More broadly, the drafters also agree that religious liberty,
or freedom of conscience, is a fundamental, inalienable right for all
people, religious and nonreligious, and that there is a need to correct
misunderstandings about this right. The joint statement, which is
formatted in a Q and A style, seeks to provide accessible and useful
information for Americans about this area of law.
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