Abstract
This Article argues that we should make real efforts to protect religious freedom for partly acculturated religious activities and organizations. We should not reject their claims broadly or per se and thereby exclude them from the efforts at accommodation that other groups receive. The law should not force all religious organizations and activities into one of the two polar categories, acculturated or unacculturated. Part II of this Article presents several reasons why there is a strong interest in protecting the freedom to engage in partly acculturated religious activity.
Recommended Citation
Thomas C. Berg,
Partly Accultured Religious Activity: A Case for Accommodating Religious Nonprofits,
91
Notre Dame L. Rev.
1341
(2016).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.nd.edu/ndlr/vol91/iss4/3