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99 U. Det. Mercy L. Rev. 299 (2021-2022)
Is the Devil in the Details? Religious Objections to Biometric Technology in the Workplace

handle is hein.journals/udetmr99 and id is 317 raw text is: 








Is  The Devil In The Details? Religious

Objections To Biometric Technology In

The Workplace

JOHN  G. BROWNING*

I.   INTRODUCTION
     The  COVID-19   pandemic   has brought issues involving bodily auton-
omy  into new focus. Whether  one considers face mask  mandates  and what
we  put on our bodies, or vaccine mandates and what  we put in our bodies,
this issue has been front and center. A related subject, religious exemptions
cited as grounds for opposing compulsory vaccination, has also received in-
creased attention.' But there is another area in which legal challenges have
been raised in support of bodily autonomy, challenges which are also based
on deeply-held religious beliefs. At a time when our technological innova-
tions are moving  at a much  faster pace than our legal system can address
them, these legal challenges based on claimed religious exemptions can not
only yield helpful insight into ongoing battles over vaccine mandates, but
also help inform the debate over limits placed on bodily autonomy and, par-
ticularly, bodily autonomy in the modern workplace.
     This article will begin with an examination  of biometric technology
generally, and the regulatory landscape governing this emerging technology.
Biometrics have  become  ubiquitous: while there was a time when  using a
facial scan or retinal scan was something one would see in a Hollywood spy
thriller or (in real life) only in highly-sensitive jobs dealing with top secret
information, today biometrics have become   increasingly common   for con-
sumers  and in all kinds of businesses. If you've visited theme parks like


    *  John Browning is the Distinguished Jurist in Residence and Professor of Law at
Faulkner University's Jones School of Law, a partner in the Plano, Texas office of Spencer
Fane, LLP, and a former Justice on Texas' Fifth District Court of Appeals. He has authored
several books and numerous articles, including many at the intersection of law and technol-
ogy. Justice Browning also serves as Chair of the Institute for Law & Technology at the Center
for American and International Law.
    1.  Interestingly enough, in sharp contrast to some modern vaccination opponents' re-
liance on religious grounds and criticizing the medical establishment, early in American his-
tory the roles were reversed. For example, during the smallpox epidemic that struck Boston
in 1721-one of the deadliest in colonial history-prominent Protestant leader Reverend Cot-
ton Mather called for mass preventative inoculation. Virtually all the physicians vehemently
opposed it, with some citing religious arguments like vaccination being an interference with
God's will. See, e.g., Margot Minardi, The Boston Inoculation Controversy of 1721-1722: An
Incident in the History of Race, 61 WM. & MARY Q. 47 (Jan. 2004).

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