Conflict of Laws and the Regulation of Public Health

In recent months religious believers in parts of the United States as well as western Europe have come to sense that public health regulations are being uniquely turned against them. In a Thanksgiving gift to religious believers in New York, late Wednesday evening the Supreme Court granted the request of the Diocese of Brooklyn (alongside a group representing Haredi Orthodox Jews) for injunctive relief from an executive order restricting occupancy at religious services to ten persons in COVID-19 “red zones” and twenty-five persons in “orange zones.” Catholics in France have not been so lucky, and there a national restriction limits religious services to thirty persons, even in France’s greatest cathedral churches. In both cases, governments claim to be fully committed to upholding liberty of religion as well as public interest writ large yet reach divergent conclusions.

This divergence points to a difficulty in one of the key concepts underlying this year’s restrictions on public activities—namely that of public order, which this year has taken the form of regulations made in the name of public health. In normal times, public order is a background condition assumed for the sake of going about the rest of one’s business. When the local fire department inspects a church building and concludes that four hundred people can safely fit within it, no one, least of all church authorities, bats an eye. In the church–state boundary dispute currently before us, however, religious congregations have faced severe adverse restrictions on their activities. And while Americans may be grateful that religious liberty jurisprudence worked in our favor this time, the same considerations—balancing public health and the demands of religious liberty—led to an adverse outcome in France, and one against which there is no appeal.

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A new edition of Wulfstan’s legal writings

Old English Legal Writings: Wulfstan
Edited and Translated by Andrew Rabin
Harvard University Press (Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library 66)

Archbishop Wulfstan of York is not a household name, even, one imagines, among those with an interest in the Anglo-American legal tradition. However, he was, in the years shortly before the Norman Conquest, a hugely influential figure in England. An accomplished prose stylist, jurist, and preacher, Wulfstan’s influence spanned the reigns of Æthelred the Unready and Cnut. He wrote a number of law codes for both kings—along with political tracts and extensive ecclesiastical legislation. A new edition, edited and translated by University of Louisville professor Andrew Rabin, collects these law codes, political tracts, and ecclesiastical laws. Taking the work as a whole, one finds in Wulfstan a remarkably well developed concept of the commonwealth, sustained by order and justice, animated by Christianity, implemented through his civil and ecclesiastical laws. 

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