Talk:Carl Esbeck

Latest comment: 7 years ago by InternetArchiveBot in topic External links modified

Notability

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Carl Esbeck has published extensively in the field of religious liberties and civil rights.

Representative publications

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Governance and the Religion Question: Voluntaryism, Disestablishment, and America's Church-State Proposition, 48 Journal of Church & State 202 (Spring 2006)

The Freedom of Faith-Based Organizations to Staff On a Religious Basis, CENTER FOR PUBLIC JUSTICE (Sept, 2004). with Stanley W. Carlson-Thies & Ronald J. Sider

Religious Organizations in the United States, A Study of Identity, Liberty, and the Law, (Carolina Academic Press, 2004). contributed 2 chapters to this book - Regulation of Religious Organizations via Governmental Financial Assistance and Charitable Choice and the Critics.

The Establishment Clause as a Structural Restraint: Validations and Ramifications, 18 JOURNAL OF LAW & POLITICS 445 (2002).

Statement Before the United States House of Representatives Concerning Charitable Choice and the Community Solutions Act, 16 NOTRE DAME JOURNAL OF LAW, ETHICS & PUB. POL'Y 567 (2002).

Myths, Miscues and Misconceptions: No-Aid Separationism and the Establishment Clause, 13 NOTRE DAME JOURNAL OF LAW, ETHICS & PUBLIC POLICY 285 (1999).

On Rights and Restraints, 94 LIBERTY 22-29 (March/April 1999).

The Neutral Treatment of Religion and Faith-Based Social Service Providers: Charitable Choice and Its Critics, in WELFARE REFORM AND FAITH-BASED ORGANIZATIONS 173 (Derek Davis & Barry Hankins editors, 1999).

The Establishment Clause as a Structural Restraint on Governmental Power, 84 IOWA L. REV. 1-113 (1998)


Leadership

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2001-2002: Senior Counsel to Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson, U.S. Department of Justice, and Director of the Department of Justice's Task Force on Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.

1999-2001: Director, Center for Law and Religious Freedom, Annandale, Virginia. The Center is a public interest law firm operating under the auspices of the Christian Legal Society. The Center does constitutional litigation, legislative work, and public education.

Professor Esbeck serves on the Advisory Council of the Pew Roundtable on Religion and Social Welfare Policy located at George Washington Univ. law school; is a member of the Executive Committee of the Religious Liberties Practice Group of the Federalist Society; he serves as legal counsel to the Office of Governmental Affairs of the Nat'l Assoc. of Evangelicals; is a member of the Advisory Council of the Henry Institute for the Study of Christianity and Politics at Calvin College; and he is a member of the Advisory Committee of the Journal of Law & Religion.

Thanks for the notability explanation

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I have removed the speedy tag (and the contested tag). Dark Shikari 14:28, 26 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

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