And some legal analysts say the Hobby Lobby ruling, which made headlines as the first ever to grant religious rights to a corporation, signaled a less-visible but equally important shift in the law toward claims of religious freedom. “There is no concern for women’s interests … no suggestion that women who were harmed would have any recourse,” said Micah Schwartzman, a University of Virginia law professor. He contrasted the court’s concern for the Amish farmer’s workers in 1982 with its brush-off of Hobby Lobby’s employees. In an article on Slate...