It is intended more as a supplement to a domestic law course rather than the
text for a comparative law course, but Leslie Jacobs and I co-authored Global
Issues in Freedom of Speech and Religion in 2009. About 160 pages are law and
religion materials. West is the publisher.
Alan Brownstein
This is a very short course -- one credit -- 1 hour a day, 4 days a week, for
3 weeks (in Lyon). Is there any chance you could send me a PDF or text version
of your 160 pages so I can look at them. I could not assign the whole book for
this short course but would love to borrow a case or two
I’m sure West would be happy to send you a complimentary copy – even on
speculation. Just ask them. (By the way, the book is paperback and not very
expensive.)
From: religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu
[mailto:religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu] On Behalf Of Paul Finkelman
Sent: Monday, May 12,
Whoops. My apologies to the list. I intended the prior e-mail to go to Paul
directly, not to the list.
From: religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu
[mailto:religionlaw-boun...@lists.ucla.edu] On Behalf Of Alan Brownstein
Sent: Monday, May 12, 2014 9:58 AM
To: Paul Finkelman; Law Religion issues
i apologize to the list as well, I thought I was just responding to Alan. Bad
day for emailing I guess
From: Alan Brownstein aebrownst...@ucdavis.edu
To: Law Religion issues for Law Academics religionlaw@lists.ucla.edu
I was just reading, and being puzzled by, Hadley Arkes' First Things article,
Recasting Religious Freedom,
http://gallery.mailchimp.com/87af8f0af298f8ee9016150c3/files/f4e8099e-b859-4316-b018-30b1df49f257.pdf.
I hesitate to try to summarize his point, for fear that I didn't fully grasp
it;