Your Weekly Constitutional
- Autor: Vários
- Narrador: Vários
- Editora: Podcast
- Duração: 343:37:49
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Sinopse
Produced in partnership with James Madison's Montpelier, Your Weekly Constitutional is a public radio show featuring lively discussion of controversial constitutional topics, from Gay Rights to Gun Rights. Find us on Facebook and iTunes!
Episódios
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Should Women Vote?
13/07/2011 Duração: 59minFew people would argue the point today, but many people argued about it prior to 1920. We'll speak with Knoxville attorney Wanda Sobieski about the fight for women's suffrage, including the dramatic story of the final ratification of the 19th Amendment in Tennessee.
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We the People National Finals
29/06/2011 Duração: 59minThe Olympics! The Olympics of constitutional competitions, that is: the We the People National Finals in Washington, DC, where the best teams from all 50 states recently competed for glory. Our most exciting episode to date!
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Evolution v. Intelligent Design
15/06/2011 Duração: 54minDoes Intelligent Design belong in public school biology classes? What is "Intelligent Design" anyway? And how does it relate to evolution? And what does the Constitution have to say about it?We'll talk to one of the lawyers who argued the famous Dover v. Kitzmiller case, in which this very issue was put to the test. It was the second great "Monkey Trial," and this time, a federal court decided that . . . . well, you'll just have to listen to find out.
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Strict Constructionism
10/06/2011 Duração: 54minYou've probably heard variations on the term "strict constructionism," typically when a politician calls himself a "strict constructionist." But what, precisely, do these terms mean? Do they provide a roadmap to interpreting the Constitution? Or are they just labels that - strictly speaking - don't mean much?It turns out that the answer is not so simple. Indeed, over the past couple of centuries, "strict constructionism" has meant different things at different times and to different people. Good thing that we've got Joe Lane, Chair of the Political Science Department at Emory & Henry College, to explain it all to us.
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Who Wrote the Constitution?
10/06/2011 Duração: 54minSomebody had to. We talk to Richard Beeman, author of the best-selling book "Plain Honest Men: The Making of the American Constitution."
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Judicial Activism
10/06/2011 Duração: 59minA bunch of people in black robes. Who are those guys? We'll discuss judicial activism.
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Nullification
10/06/2011 Duração: 59minWhen an irresistible state collides with an immovable federal government, somethin's gotta give.
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The Kelo Eminent Domain Case
10/06/2011 Duração: 59minIs your home your castle or some corporation's next office park?
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Virginia We the People State Finals
10/06/2011 Duração: 59minGrab your lunchboxes -- we're goin' on a field trip! This episode is devoted to the recent Virginia We the People State Finals, the climactic culmination of a constitutional competition run by our own Quiz Lady, Kelly Carmichael.
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The New York City Mosque Controversy
10/06/2011 Duração: 59minDoes the Constitution have anything to say about whether Muslims can build an Islamic community center within a few blocks of Ground Zero?
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George Washington
10/06/2011 Duração: 59minFirst in war, first in peace, first in . . . writing the Constitution? Professor Jeffry Morrison will discuss the one "indispensable man" of the Constitutional Convention: George Washington. Also joining us: ASL student Joannie Burroughs.
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Constitutionality of Secession
10/06/2011 Duração: 59minIs secession constitutional? Wait -- wasn't that question settled in 1865? Perhaps not: Recent statements by some states' rights advocates make it strangely timely today. We'll hear from two attorneys: Kent Masterson Brown and Robert Black. Also joining us will be ASL students LaTri-c-ea McClendon and Chris Menerick.
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The Lost State of Franklin
01/06/2011 Duração: 59minWe'll talk to Kevin Barksdale, who wrote a great book about the mostly-forgotten attempt to create a 14th state in the 1780's, before we had a real Constitution. We'll also visit the Tipton-Haynes Historic Site, where the fight over the State of Franklin erupted into battle.