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Talking About Religious Exemptions

The Bottom Line

Newly Updated for 2019. Talking About Religious Exemptions is a guide to building effective conversations about the ways in which harmful religious exemptions threaten public safety, access to health care (including women's reproductive health), the best interests of children in state care, laws protecting Americans from discrimination, and more.

The guide offers approaches for talking about both broad religious exemptions laws (like proposed state RFRAs) as well as religious exemptions intended to encourage adoption and foster care discrimination and service discrimination—elevating effective discussions about the ways these harmful exemptions can be used to deny children loving forever homes; encourage discrimination against LGBT people, religious minorities, people of color, women and others; threaten health care and women’s reproductive health; and put the rule of law itself at risk.

Recommended citation:
Movement Advancement Project. May 2019. "Talking About Religious Exemptions." 2019 Edition. MAP's Talking About LGBT Issues Series. https://www.lgbtmap.org/talking-about-religious-exemptions

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The term “sexual orientation” is loosely defined as a person’s pattern of romantic or sexual attraction to people of the opposite sex or gender, the same sex or gender, or more than one sex or gender. Laws that explicitly mention sexual orientation primarily protect or harm lesbian, gay, and bisexual people. That said, transgender people who are lesbian, gay or bisexual can be affected by laws that explicitly mention sexual orientation.

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