The reviewer--Professor of Law and English, Cornell University; Mellon/LAPA Fellow in Law and Humanities and Visiting Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Princeton University--says that "[t]hese comments were initially presented at the book celebrations in honor of Steve Shiffrin held at Cornell Law School in November of 2009. Discussions with copanelists Sally Gordon and Kent Greenawalt, as well as with Steve himself, helped shape the final version of these remarks."
The abstract:
This
essay comments on Steve Shiffrin's The Religious Left and
Church-State
Relations. It contends, on the one hand, that Shiffrin has valuably
brought to the fore various reasons why religious believers might resist
close relations between church and state. On the other hand, it argues
that no fundamental connection exists between the "religious Left" and a
particular position on church-state relations and that religious
liberals will not necessarily be more persuasive than secular liberals
in arguing against positions espoused by religious conservatives.
[Paper
downloadable here.]
Please let us know, Steve, when that issue is available.
Michael
Posted by: Michael Perry | 05/25/2010 at 12:20 PM
Thanks to Michael. Kent and Bernie's commentary together with my response will appear in the Cornell Journal of Public Policy in its next issue. Here is a link to its table of contents, http://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/research/JLPP/Forthcoming-Issue.cfm.
Posted by: Steven Shiffrin | 05/25/2010 at 05:28 AM