A recent federal court ruling involving the University of Pennsylvania (Penn) and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) highlights an emerging conflict in constitutional law: the balance between the government’s mandate to investigate religious discrimination and the First Amendment protections afforded to religious identity and association. This case serves as a critical junction for understanding how the state interacts with religious communities within secular academic institutions.
In March 2026, U.S. District Judge Gerald Pappert issued a ruling requiring the University of Pennsylvania to provide the EEOC with records identifying Jewish employees as part of an ongoing federal investigation. The request was initiated following allegations that the university’s workplace is filled with antisemitism and that the administration failed to maintain an environment free from harassment.
The investigation cites several specific antisemitic incidents, including the destruction of property at a Jewish student center, the painting of a swastika on an academic building, and the shouting of obscenities at Jewish community members. The EEOC contended that obtaining contact information for Jewish employees is essential for determining whether the work environment was both objectively and subjectively hostile.
Penn resisted the administrative subpoena, arguing that it has a constitutional bligation to protect the rights of their employees. The university claimed that it does not keep formal lists of employees by religion and expressed concern that being compelled to create lists for the government raises privacy and First Amendment issues. Judge Pappert’s ruling attempted a middle ground: while he upheld the subpoena’s core requirement, he specifically exempted information regarding three independent Jewish organizations, Penn Hillel, MEOR, and Chabad Lubavitch House, noting they are legally and financially separate from the university.
The primary constitutional issues in this case involve the Free Exercise Clause, the Establishment Clause, and the implied First Amendment right to freedom of association.
Under the Free Exercise Clause, the question is whether the government’s request for the identities of religious practitioners creates a chilling effect on the practice of faith. If employees fear that their religious identity is being tracked by a federal agency, they may be less likely to associate with religious organizations on campus. Rabbi Menachem Schmidt of Chabad at Penn noted that the “non-consensual disclosure of personal information” could cripple the mission of religious groups by compromising the privacy of those they serve.
From an Establishment Clause perspective, the case touches upon the doctrine of excessive entanglement. By requiring a secular university to categorize and report its staff based on religious identity, the state risks intruding into the internal administration of religious life. Penn and various advocacy groups argued that government-mandated “lists of Jews” carry historical weight, a comparison the judge found “unfortunate” but which highlights the deep-seated fear of state-sponsored religious tracking.
The constitutional challenge is to determine whether the EEOC’s request is narrowly tailored to a compelling government interest. This debate is deeply rooted in historical legal precedents. A foundational case related to this issue is NAACP v. Alabama (1958). In that instance, the Supreme Court ruled that the state could not compel the NAACP to reveal its membership lists because doing so would violate the members’ right to pursue their collective interests privately and would expose them to potential retaliation. Penn’s argument rests on a similar logic, that the government’s forced outing of religious identity infringes upon the privacy of association.
However, the government has a compelling interest in eradicating discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. To satisfy the First Amendment, the state must show that its methods they are using are the least restrictive means of achieving that goal. Judge Pappert concluded that the EEOC’s request met this standard because it was “narrowly tailored” to specific individuals who could have witnessed or experienced harassment.
I argue that Judge Pappert’s decision represents a necessary constitutional compromise. By exempting independent religious bodies like Penn Hillel and Chabad, the autonomy of purely religious institutions. This prevents the state from exerting too much power over a ministry, which would likely violate the Establishment Clause’s prohibition on excessive entanglement.
Furthermore, the ruling preserves individual liberty by clarifying that employees retain the right to refuse participation in the investigation. This ensures that the government’s attempt to remedy a "hostile environment" does not itself become a form of administrative coercion.
This case sets a potential precedent for how federal agencies handle religious identity in civil rights probes across the country. If the government were completely barred from identifying potential victims based on religion, it would be impossible to enforce civil rights laws. Yet, if the government’s power to demand religious lists were absolute, it would signal the end of religious privacy. The Penn ruling suggests that while the state may request such data to protect citizens, it must do so with extreme caution, respecting the boundaries of independent religious associations and individual consent. This balance is essential to maintaining a society where the rule of law protects religious practitioners without violating the sanctity of their private beliefs.