"'A Day to Exhale’: Supreme Court Deadlocks on Religious Charter Schools — For Now"
The 74 quoted Robert Tuttle saying "The case seemed to many people like a vehicle for expanding the idea of school choice as broadly as possible."
Robert W. Tuttle
David R. and Sherry Kirschner Berz Research Professor of Law and Religion
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Robert Tuttle is the David R. and Sherry Kirschner Berz Research Professor of Law and Religion at the George Washington University Law School, where he has taught since 1994, as well as Professor of Religion (by courtesy) in the University’s Columbian College of Arts & Sciences. After graduating from GW Law, he earned a PhD in religious ethics from the University of Virginia; he also holds a BA from the College of William & Mary, and a master’s degree from the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago. With Ira C. Lupu, Professor Tuttle was the co-director of the Legal Tracking Project of the Roundtable on Religion and Social Welfare Policy, which studied government funding of religious social services. He is the author or co-author of numerous articles and reports in the fields of church-state law and legal ethics, along with the book Secular Government, Religious People (Eerdmans, 2014). Professor Tuttle serves as legal counsel to the Washington, D.C., Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, and as a consultant for Lutheran Services in America. He also serves as a Senior Fellow of the Emory University Center for Law and Religion.
"'A Day to Exhale’: Supreme Court Deadlocks on Religious Charter Schools — For Now"
The 74 quoted Robert Tuttle saying "The case seemed to many people like a vehicle for expanding the idea of school choice as broadly as possible."
"Supreme Court to weigh opening of what could be nation’s first religious charter school"
The Washington Times quoted Robert Tuttle about where the funding for the nation’s first religious charter school came from.
"Here's how Trump's Faith Office and task force against 'anti-Christian bias' may work."
NPR’s "All Things Considered’’ spoke to Robert Tuttle about the relationship between Christianity and its perceived mistreatment by the government.
BA, College of William and Mary; MA, Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago; JD, The George Washington University; PhD, University of Virginia