William P. Marshall
William P. Marshall is Kenan Professor of Law and a constitutional lawyer at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
William P. Marshall is Kenan Professor of Law and a constitutional lawyer at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
Charles A. Marvin teaches law at Georgia State University in Atlanta and specializes in law and religion. Contact 404-651-2436, [email protected].
Jerry Biberman is a professor of management at the University of Scranton who writes, teaches, consults and speaks about work and spirituality. He co-edited Work and Spirit: A Reader of New Spiritual Paradigms for Organizations (University of Scranton, 2000). He is editor of the Journal of Management, Spirituality & Religion.
David L. Gregory is a law professor at St. John’s University in Jamaica, N.Y., who specializes in labor and employment issues. He co-wrote Labor Management Relations and the Law (Foundation, 1999) and edited Labor and the Constitution: Labor and Property, Privacy, Discrimination and International Relations (Garland Press, 1999).
e. christi cunningham teaches law at Howard University and has written about employment discrimination.
Steven D. Jamar teaches law at Howard University and has written about religion in the workplace.
Laura L. Nash is a business ethicist, academic advisor for the Business Roundtable Institute for Corporate Ethics and former senior research fellow at Harvard Business School. She wrote Church on Sunday, Work on Monday: The Challenge of Fusing Christian Values With Business Life (Jossey-Bass, 2001). Contact through BRICE.
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.