Marc Stern
Marc Stern is General Counsel at the American Jewish Committee in Washington, D.C. He headed the committee that drafted Guidelines on Religious Exercise and Religious Expression in the Federal Workplace.
Marc Stern is General Counsel at the American Jewish Committee in Washington, D.C. He headed the committee that drafted Guidelines on Religious Exercise and Religious Expression in the Federal Workplace.
John Graz is director of the Public Affairs and Religious Liberty Department of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. He is an expert in church-state issues, including workplace bias concerns, and he is based in Silver Spring, Md.
Kim Colby is senior counsel at the Christian Legal Society in Springfield, Virginia, and has worked at the society’s Center for Law and Religious Freedom since 1981.
Judi Neal heads the Association for Spirit at Work, a professional association for people trying to live out their faith in the workplace.
Douglas A. Hicks is is provost and dean of the faculty of Colgate University, in Hamilton, New York. Hicks is an ordained Presbyterian minister and author of Religion and the Workplace: Pluralism, Spirituality, Leadership (Cambridge University, 2003). He is a leading commentator on issues of faith and work and can speak to the impact of the growing presence of […]
David W. Miller is founding Director of the Princeton University Faith & Work Initiative. He was director of the Yale Center for Faith and Culture and an assistant professor of business ethics at Yale Divinity School. He also led the center’s Ethics and Spirituality in the Workplace program. He is an ordained Presbyterian minister with a degree […]
Read about Chick-fil-A President Dan Cathy, who tries to incorporate Christian teachings into the work ethic of his huge and popular business, including closing his fast-food outlets on Sundays. Chick-fil-A was embroiled in controversy in 2012 following a series of comments by Cathy opposing same-sex marriage.
Read a Feb. 1, 2005, Boston Globe story about conflicts over religion in the workplace.
A March 12, 2005, Washington Post story about 30 Dell employees who walked off their jobs after being told they couldn’t pray according to Muslim practice.