Skip to Main Content
School of Public Health

​
  • Admissions
  • Research
  • Education
  • Practice
​
Search
  • Newsroom
    • School News
    • SPH This Week Newsletter
    • SPH in the Media
    • SPH This Year Magazine
    • News Categories
    • Contact Us
  • Research
    • Centers and Groups
  • Academic Departments
    • Biostatistics
    • Community Health Sciences
    • Environmental Health
    • Epidemiology
    • Global Health
    • Health Law, Policy & Management
  • Education
    • Degrees & Programs
    • Public Health Writing
    • Workforce Development Training Centers
    • Partnerships
    • Apply Now
  • Admissions
    • Applying to BUSPH
    • Request Information
    • Degrees and Programs
    • Why Study at BUSPH?
    • Tuition and Funding
    • SPH by the Numbers
    • Events and Campus Visits
    • Admissions Team
    • Student Ambassadors
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Events
    • Public Health Conversations
    • Full Events Calendar
    • Alumni and Friends Events
    • Commencement Ceremony
    • SPH Awards
  • Practice
    • Activist Lab
  • Careers & Practicum
    • For Students
    • For Employers
    • For Faculty & Staff
    • For Alumni
    • Graduate Employment & Practicum Data
  • Public Health Post
    • Public Health Post Fellowship
  • About
    • SPH at a Glance
    • Advisory Committees
    • Strategy Map
    • Senior Leadership
    • Accreditation
    • Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Justice
    • Directory
    • Contact SPH
  • Support SPH
    • Big Ideas: Strategic Directions
    • Faculty Research and Development
    • Future of Public Health Fund
    • Generation Health
    • idea hub
    • Public Health Conversations
    • Public Health Post
    • Student Scholarship
    • How to Give
    • Contact Development and Alumni Relations
  • Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Directory
Read More News
Sign and plaque on the facade of The Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street in Greenwich Village, NYC
Community Health Sciences

‘No Community Is Healthy Until All of Its Constituents Are Healthy’

colorful gif of Talbot Building
LGBTQIA+ health

The Long Game of Pride

Wendy Mariner Argues Hobby Lobby Case Expands Corporate Personhood at Expense of Women.

July 3, 2014
Twitter Facebook

In a stinging two-part analysis of the Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby decision, SPH Health Law Professor Wendy Mariner takes issue with the court’s continuing “legal fiction” of extending the benefits of personhood to corporations.

Writing for the Health Law Professor Blog, Mariner contends that the court’s majority opinion, ruling that for-profit corporations can claim a religious exemption from federal laws that conflict with the personal religious beliefs of people who own the corporation, actually misreads the intent of Congress by expanding the Religious Freedom Restoration Act’s definition of persons to include corporations.

wmariner_recrop_small
Wendy Mariner

“First, the text of RFRA does not define “person” at all. All RFRA says is: “Government may substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion only if it demonstrates that application of the burden to the person – (1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and (2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling governmental interest.” (Italics mine.) The majority ignores the “legal fiction” that a corporation is separate from its owners and adopts its own fiction that corporations can “exercise” the religion of their owners,” Mariner wrote.

Future interpretations of the ruling may roll back other rights of employees in deference to religious freedom claims by owners.

In the second part of the analysis, Mariner challenges the court’s deliberately unscientific take on what actually constitutes a substantial burden, and who is able to make that determination.

Hobby Lobby claimed federal rules requiring it to offer insurance plans to its employees that included contraceptive coverage directly conflicted with the religious beliefs of the company’s owners.

“By allowing the corporations and their owners to determine what counts as a substantial burden on their ‘exercise of religion,’ the five Justices in the majority appear to have removed that question from judicial review,” Mariner wrote. This has serious implications for future claims that RFRA excuses corporations from complying with neutral and generally applicable federal laws.”

If the courts continue to allow corporations to avoid compliance with laws by claiming a substantial burden, Mariner wrote, “It will be difficult to enforce the law fairly and uniformly. Employees – especially women – will be deprived of government protection.”

Explore Related Topics:

  • ethics & human rights
  • health law
  • Share this story

Share

Wendy Mariner Argues Hobby Lobby Case Expands Corporate Personhood at Expense of Women

  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  • Print
  • More
  • Twitter

More about SPH

Sign up for our newsletter

Get the latest from Boston University School of Public Health

Subscribe

Also See

  • About
  • Newsroom
  • Contact
  • Support SPH

Resources

  • Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Alumni
  • Directory
  • Boston University School of Public Health
  • 715 Albany Street, Boston, MA 02118
  • © 2021 Trustees of Boston University
  • DMCA
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
© Boston University. All rights reserved. www.bu.edu
Boston University Masterplate
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.