Constitutional Conversations Podcast
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The National Constitution Center invites you to participate in a national conversation about the Constitution, its history and its contemporary relevance. Our programming features nationally recognized leaders debating and discussing the Constitution, our rights and responsibilities as citizens, and everyday politics. Join us and listen!
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Cullen Murphy: God's Jury: The Inquisition and the Making of the Modern World
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, February 07, 2012
Vanity Fair editor Cullen Murphy discusses his new book, God’s Jury: The Inquisition and the Making of the Modern World, taking us from the musty Vatican archives to the detention cells of Guantanamo; from the heretical fortresses of medieval France to the burning of books in modern Florida; from the torture chambers of the Spanish Inquisition to the file cabinets of the East German secret police; and from the streets of colonial Santa Fe to the inner sanctums of the White House. Murphy argues that when you look at the Inquisition, what you really see is the beginning of the struggle for freedom in the modern world. James B. Steele, contributing editor for Vanity Fair, facilitated this discussion on January 24, 2012.

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Jodi Kantor: The Obamas
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, January 02, 2012
In her highly anticipated book, The Obamas, New York Times reporter Jodi Kantor provides an insider’s perspective on Barack and Michelle Obamas' experiences as president and first lady -- raising children, maintaining friendships and being the first African-American “first couple†to occupy the White House. Filled with riveting detail, humor, emotional and psychological depth, and keen insights on the ironies of public life, The Obamas is an intimate portrait that will surprise even readers who thought they understood America’s most famous pair. Alison Young, Vice President of Public Engagement at the National Constitution Center, facilitates the discussion which took place on January 18, 2012.
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What Would the Founding Fathers Think of Facebook?
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, January 26, 2012
Privacy expert and author Lori Andrews, Forbes blogger Kashmir Hill, and New York Times reporter Jennifer Preston join the National Constitution Center to speak about how the Founding Fathers might have handled online social networks. What would happen if social networking sites were subject to the Bill of Rights? With 750,000,000 members, Facebook is the third largest nation in the world; should it have a Constitution? If so, what rights and responsibilities should be included? Christopher Wink, co-founder of Technically Philly, moderates this discussion from January 12, 2012.
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Chris Matthews on Jack Kennedy: Elusive Hero
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, November 15, 2011
MSNBC's Hardball host and bestselling author Chris Matthews joins nationally syndicated radio host Michael Smerconish in conversation about his new book, Jack Kennedy: Elusive Hero. By following the journey of President Kennedy’s life from his school days to the White House, through his toughest trials and greatest triumphs, Matthews brings us much closer to the man Kennedy really was. Program recorded on 11/3/11.
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Tony Horwitz: Midnight Rising: John Brown and the Raid that Sparked the Civil War
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, November 7, 2011
In his latest book, Midnight Rising: John Brown and the Raid that Sparked the Civil War, bestselling author Tony Horwitz explores the electrifying tale of the daring insurrection that put America on the path to civil war. In this discussion Horwitz shares Brown's uprising in vivid color, revealing a country on the brink of explosive conflict. Judith Giesberg, Associate Professor of History at Villanova University, facilitates the conversation. Program recorded on 11/3/11.
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The Supreme Court's Upcoming Milestone Term
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, October 19, 2011
The current term of the U.S. Supreme Court, which opened Monday, October 3, is expected by many observers to be the most challenging in years. Lyle Denniston, veteran Supreme Court correspondent and the Center’s Advisor on Constitutional Literacy, and John Payton, President and Director-Counsel of the NAACP’s Legal Defense Fund, discuss the controversies already on the docket. Program recorded on 09/29/11.
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Richard Brookhiser: James Madison
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, October 14, 2011
James Madison led one of the most influential and prolific lives in American history. Although often overshadowed by his more celebrated contemporaries, Madison helped to shape our country as perhaps no other Founder did. Eminent historian Richard Brookhiser joins Michael C. Quinn, president of the Montpelier Foundation, to discuss his newly released book about the “Father of the Constitution,†an accomplished yet humble statesman who nourished Americans’ fledgling liberty and vigorously defended the laws that have preserved it to this day. This program is presented in partnership with James Madison's Montpelier. Program recorded on 10/11/11.
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Dana Priest: Top Secret America
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, October 12, 2011
Award-winning Washington Post reporter Dana Priest joins the Center to discuss her new book, Top Secret America, and the size, shape, mission and consequences of the universe of over 1,300 government facilities in every state in America; nearly 2,000 outside companies used as contractors; and more than 850,000 people granted "Top Secret" security clearance in response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Program recorded on 9/12/11.
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A Conversation with Robert M. Gates
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, October 03, 2011
In a special program at the National Constitution Center, featuring questions from a live audience and those submitted via Twitter, 2011 Liberty Medal recipient and former Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates spoke about a range of subjects–from the future of the military, to the status of Middle East diplomacy, to the repeal of the Don’t Ask, Don’t tell policy. The conversation with Dr. Gates, which took place before an invited audience that includes ROTC cadets from St. Joseph’s University and the University of Pennsylvania, was moderated by David Eisner, President & CEO of the Center. Program recorded on 9/22/11.
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Cradle of Liberty
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, July 29, 2011
As the birthplace of America, and the city where the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution came to life, Philadelphia has a longstanding legacy of liberty. This program, presented in partnership with the Greater Philadelphia Roundtable, invites public participation in considering Philadelphia's history and experiences as a "Cradle of Liberty." Moderated by Richard Beeman of the University of Pennsylvania, this program features Gary Nash of the University of California, Los Angeles; Michael Coard of Avenging the Ancestors Coalition; and Richard Newman of the Rochester Institute of Technology. Friends of Independence and Avenging the Ancestors Coalition co-sponsored this event. Program recorded on 6/23/11.
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Supreme Court Term in Review
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, July 12, 2011
As the Supreme Court of the United States concluded its 2010-2011 session, the National Constitution Center welcomed veteran Supreme Court correspondent Lyle Denniston to give a lunchtime talk about the most significant rulings of the term and how these decisions impact the lives of Americans. He also analyzed how the Court's new justices have changed the institution. Program recorded on 7/6/11.
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9th Annual Templeton Lecture: Competition and the Constitution
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, June 27, 2011
The Ninth Annual John M. Templeton, Jr. Lecture on Economic Liberties and the Constitution considers how the Constitution addresses government regulation and relies on competition as a method of political organization. Keynote speaker Christopher DeMuth, D.C. Searle Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, explores the laws and regulations that can inhibit economic liberty and examine the boundaries between the Constitution’s explicit and implicit guarantees of competition, which have been contested throughout our political history. Michael L. Wachter, William B. Johnson Professor of Law and Economics and Co-Director, Institute for Law and Economics at the University of Pennsylvania, provides the response to Mr. DeMuth's presentation. Daniel Gross, economics editor and columnist at Yahoo! Finance, facilitated the conversation. Program recorded on 6/16/11.
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Transparency and Open Government
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, June 08, 2011
Thomas E. Mills, Acting Deputy Archivist of the United States, joins The Philadelphia Inquirer’s Bill Marimow for a conversation about issues of government transparency, state secrets, classification and access to government documents and information. How transparent should government be? Can there be limits in our democracy on citizens’ right to information? Is access to information a right? What can citizens do to make the government more open with its information and resources? Program recorded on 5/3/11.
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1861: The Civil War Awakening
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, May 24, 2011
1861: The Civil War Awakening, Adam Goodheart’s new book, is an epic of courage and heroism beyond the battlefields. Marking the sesquicentennial of the start of the Civil War, Goodheart joined the Center to share the gripping account of how the Civil War began. Dr. Richard R. Beeman, the John Welsh Centennial Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania, facilitated the conversation. Program recorded on 4/13/11.
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What Is National Security?
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, May 18, 2011
Is there a conflict between national security and civil liberties? Fox 29’s Vice President and General Manager Patrick Paolini moderates a discussion on the challenge of securing our nation while maintaining our constitutional balance in times of crisis. Former National Security Advisor and National Constitution Center Visiting Scholar Richard Allen and University of Pennsylvania Law professor Deborah Pearlstein share their experience. This program is a special presentation in partnership with the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and in conjunction with the Center's exhibition, Spies, Traitors & Saboteurs: Fear and Freedom in America. Program recorded on 5/09/11.
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Can We Talk? A Conversation About Civility and Democracy in America
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Author: National Constitution Center Thur, May 12, 2011
Former U.S. Representative Lee H. Hamilton (D-IN), John G. Palfrey, Jr., Professor of Law and Vice Dean for Library and Information Resources at Harvard Law School, and Keli A. Carender, political activist and blogger credited with starting the Tea Party movement, discuss the future of civility in our democracy in the midst of our nation's ongoing debate about the inflamed state of political discourse. This program is presented as part of “Can We Talk? A Conversation about Civility and Democracy in America,†partially funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities’ Bridging Cultures program. Program recorded on 3/26/11.
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Prohibition
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, May 09, 2011
The National Constitution Center and PBS hosted an advanced look at the upcoming documentary film, “Prohibition,†directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick, scheduled to air on PBS this coming fall. The screening of highlights from the film and audience Q&A represented the opening event of “Can We Talk? A Conversation about Civility and Democracy in America†that took place at the Center March 25 through March 27, 2011 with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Program recorded on 3/25/11.
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Encore: How Your Next Career Can Change the World
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, May 2, 2011
More and more, Americans are driven to careers that connect us to the social challenges of our time. How are we shifting from jobs to “encore careers†that embrace civic engagement? Renowned social entrepreneur Marc Freedman addresses these issues as he kicks off his book tour at the Center in support of The Big Shift. In a conversation with National Constitution Center President and CEO David Eisner, Freedman discusses the challenge of transitioning to and making the most of this new stage, which he believes is an urgent social imperative. He urges people to rethink their civic connections and to do work that matters, helping Americans realize the vision of the founders – an engaged citizenry. Program recorded on 4/5/11.
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Putting the 14th Amendment to the Test
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, March 11, 2011
Putting the 14th Amendment to the Test explores whether the language of the 14th Amendment should be modified, left in its present state, or reinterpreted to deny citizenship to the children of illegal immigrants. Jeff Greenfield, senior political correspondent for CBS News, moderates this timely program addressing the issue of immigration reform and birthright citizenship with Fellows of the Peter Jennings Project and distinguished guests John C. Eastman, Daryl Metcalfe, Jorge Mursuli, Marjorie Rendell, and Cecillia Wang. Program recorded on 3/5/11.
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Call to Action: A Congressional Town Hall Meeting
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, March 07, 2011
WPHT Talk Radio 1210 AM’s Dom Giordano and National Constitution Center President and CEO David Eisner hosted this live, public forum on the priorities for the 112th Congress with members of the U.S. House Chaka Fattah (D-PA/2), Mike Fitzpatrick (R-PA/8), Jim Gerlach (R-PA/6), Pat Meehan (R-PA/7) and John Runyan (R-NJ/3). Program recorded on 2/21/11.
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Donald Rumsfeld: Known and Unknown
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, February 11, 2011
Marking the first stop on his highly-anticipated national book tour, former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld joins the National Constitution Center for a conversation with historian Michael Beschloss about previously undisclosed details and insights about the Bush administration, 9/11, and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. The discussion also draws on the themes from Rumsfeld's new memoir which chronicles his long career in public service, including his four terms in Congress and his service in the administrations of Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and George W. Bush. Program recorded on 2/09/11.
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Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, December 20, 2010
The National Constitution Center presents best-selling author Dan Okrent in a conversation with CEO David Eisner about his new book, Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, which tells the fascinating history of Prohibition and its broader constitutional implications. Detailing the political forces that organized to pass the law, Okrent provides an engaging account of how Prohibition got started, its impact on the lives of everyday Americans, and the eventual swell of public support that led to the only constitutional amendment to ever be repealed. Program recorded on 12/06/10.
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Time Managing Editor Rick Stengel
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, December 06, 2010
The National Constitution Center presents TIME managing editor, Richard Stengel, in a conversation about the 21st Century through the lens of TIME: The Illustrated History of the World’s Most Influential Magazine. Stengel also discusses the current state of media and his tenure as the leader of the Center from 2004-2006 with David Eisner, current President & CEO. Program recorded on 12/02/10.
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What is National Security?
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, November 24, 2010
The National Constitution Center’s newly appointed 2010-11 Visiting Scholar, Richard V. Allen, explores the question “What is national security?†in the first program of a two-part series. Allen is a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and served under both Presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. Stanley Ridgley, Assistant Professor of Strategic Management and International Business at Temple University’s Fox School of Business, facilitates the discussion. Program recorded on 11/15/10.
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Big Citizenship
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, November 16, 2010
The National Constitution Center presents a special Veterans Day, 2010 roundtable conversation about the importance of active citizenship with Alan Khazei, co-founder of City Year and author of the new book Big Citizenship: How Pragmatic Idealism Can Bring Out the Best in America. In a political environment often bogged down by petty bickering and cynicism, Khazei prescribes a way to bridge differences and effect powerful change. Joining Khazei in the discussion is former United States Senator Harris Wofford, Associate Director of the Peace Corps from 1962-1966, and David Eisner, President & CEO of the National Constitution Center and former CEO of the Corporation for National and Community Service. Program recorded on 11/11/10.
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Ron Chernow on George Washington
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, October 26, 2010
Award-winning historian Ron Chernow discusses his new book, Washington: A Life. This painstakingly researched biography of our nation’s foremost founding father provides readers a greater understanding of Washington’s life and times. With access to previously unseen archival sources, Chernow has developed a richly nuanced account of Washington from his early years as a young firebrand to his later years as America’s first president. Dr. Steve Frank, Chief Interpretive Officer at the National Constitution Center, facilitates the discussion. Program recorded on 10/18/10.
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Stephen Breyer on Democracy
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, October 26, 2010
The National Constitution Center presents Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer for a discussion about his new book, "Making Our Democracy Work: A Judge’s View." Building on his previous book, "Active Liberty," Justice Breyer considers questions that are fundamental to our constitutional system and the future of the Supreme Court. He argues that since the nine members of the Court are not elected, they need to reinforce their institutional legitimacy by pragmatically applying unchanging constitutional values to ever-changing circumstances. Adam Liptak, Supreme Court correspondent for The New York Times, leads the discussion. Program recorded on 10/19/10.
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Supreme Court Fall '10 Preview
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, October 04, 2010
As the Supreme Court begins its new term, the National Constitution Center presents veteran Supreme Court correspondent Lyle Denniston in a conversation with Geoffrey Stone, the National Constitution Center’s 2010-11 Visiting Scholar and Professor of Law at the University of Chicago Law School, and attorney Helgi Walker, partner at Wiley Rein LLP, that addresses the major cases pending for the new term and the potential impact that newly confirmed Justice Elena Kagan will have on the dynamics of the Court. Program recorded on 9/20/10.
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Rome Reborn on Western Shores
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, August 27, 2010
The National Constitution Center, in partnership with The Library Company of Philadelphia, presents historian Eran Shalev, author of Rome Reborn on Western Shores, to discuss the literature of America’s revolutionary era, and to assess antiquity's importance to the early political culture of the United States. Rome Reborn examines the extent to which classical antiquity, especially Rome, molded understandings of history, politics, and time, even as the experience of the Revolution reshaped patriots' understanding of the classics. Daniel Richter, Professor of American History at the University of Pennsylvania, moderates. Program recorded on 7/13/10.
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Supreme Court Term in Review
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, August 02, 2010
The National Constitution Center welcomes veteran Supreme Court correspondent Lyle Denniston to lead a discussion with former United States Solicitor General Gregory Garre and NAACP LDF President John Payton about the most significant rulings of the most recent Supreme Court term and how these decisions will impact the lives of Americans. The program also addresses the retirement of Justice John Paul Stevens and the nomination of now confirmed Justice Elena Kagan. Program recorded on 7/8/10.
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Lost Rights: The Misadventures of a Stolen American Relic
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, August 02, 2010
Journalist and author David Howard discusses the fascinating story of the disappearance of North Carolina’s original copy of the Bill of Rights. His new book, Lost Rights, follows every twist in that epic passage, from the Indiana businessman who purchased the looted parchment for five dollars to the high-end antiquities dealer who, in 2003, tried to sell it to the National Constitution Center under false pretenses for $5 million. That dubious offer triggered an unlikely series of events that climaxed with a dramatic FBI sting on the 32nd floor of a Philadelphia office tower. Program recorded on 6/29/10.
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President Obama: Year One
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, July 21, 2010
Jonathan Alter, bestselling author and national political reporter for Newsweek and NBC, provides an inside account of the breakneck speed with which President-elect Obama, and then President Obama, began making critical decisions and assuming the burdens of office amid the greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression. He also explains what the President is like as a person, how he operates, and why he is so insistent on leading the country and the world into a new era of change. Program recorded on 6/22/10.
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The War Lovers
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, July 14, 2010
The National Constitution Center presents bestselling historian and Newsweek Assistant Managing Editor Evan Thomas for a conversation about his new book, The War Lovers, the story of six men at the center of a transforming event in U.S. history and why the Spanish-American war has uncanny resonance today. Sean Wilentz, Professor of History at Princeton University, moderates. Program recorded on 6/1/10.
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Empire!
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, July 07, 2010
Rajiv Chandrasekaran, Washington Post editor and author of Imperial Life in the Emerald City, Charles Maier, author of Among Empires and Leverett Saltonstall Professor of History at Harvard University, and Timothy Parsons, author of The Rule of Empires and Professor of African History at Washington University, address issues raised in the Constitution Center's original exhibition Ancient Rome & America. They provide a sweeping account of the evolution of empire from its origins in ancient Rome to its most recent twenty-first century embodiment, explain what constitutes an empire, and offer suggestions about what empires of the past can tell us about our own historical moment. Program recorded on 6/7/10.
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Lawrence H. Summers delivers the 2010 Templeton Lecture on Economic Liberties and the Constitution.
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, June 21, 2010
Lawrence Summers, Director of the White House's National Economic Council and President Obama’s Chief Economic Adviser, discusses America's economic landscape in a post-recession world, for the National Constitution Center’s Eighth Annual John M. Templeton, Jr. Lecture on Economic Liberties and the Constitution. George L. Priest, Professor of Law and Economics and Kauffman Distinguished Research Scholar in Law, Economics, and Entrepreneurship at Yale Law School, delivers the response. Glenn Hubbard moderates. Program recorded on 5/27/10.
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Leaving a Legacy: The Departure and Replacement of Justice John Paul Stevens
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, June 17, 2010
Justice John Paul Stevens' legacy and the implications of replacing him on the Supreme Court is the focus of this experts’ roundtable hosted by the National Constitution Center and the University of Pennsylvania Law School. The roundtable of Penn Law School experts includes Cary Coglianese, Deputy Dean and Edward B. Shils Professor of Law and Professor of Political Science; Seth Kreimer, Kenneth W. Gremmil Professor of Law; Deborah Pearlstein, Visiting Faculty Fellow and Lecturer and former clerk for Justice Stevens; Kermit Roosevelt, Professor of Law; and Theodore Ruger, Professor of Law. Michael A. Fitts, Dean and Bernard G. Segal Professor of Law, moderates. Program recorded on 5/6/10.
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Revolutionaries: A New History of the Invention of America
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, June 07, 2010
On the release of his newest book, Revolutionaries: A New History of the Invention of America, Pulitzer Prize-winner Jack Rakove joins the National Constitution Center to discuss how the country came to be and why the idea of America endures. University of Pennsylvania Professor of History Richard Beeman moderates. Rakove tells the stories of the founders before they were fully formed leaders, as individuals whose lives were radically altered by the explosive events of the mid-1770s. Rakove uses little-known stories of these famous (and not so famous) men to capture--in a way no single biography ever could--the intensely creative period of the republic's founding. Program recorded on 5/11/10.
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Rethinking the Second Amendment
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, May 27, 2010
The National Constitution Center presents a timely conversation with legal scholars Joyce Lee Malcolm and David A. Strauss about one of the most important and controversial cases before the Supreme Court in the 2010 term: the Chicago gun-rights case. At issue in McDonald v. Chicago is whether the right to keep and bear arms is a fundamental constitutional privilege -- like freedom of speech, press and religion – that can be invoked by individuals against the actions of state and local governments as well as the federal government. As the briefs start coming to the Court for the case, a battle is brewing over the so-called "incorporation doctrine," which has applied most, but not all, guarantees of the federal Bill of Rights to state and local governments. The program is moderated by Lyle Denniston. Program recorded on 5/5/10.
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The Road to Global Constitutionalism
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, May 18, 2010
The National Constitution Center and the University of Pennsylvania Law School present Visiting Scholar A.E. Dick Howard, White Burkett Miller Professor of Law and Public Affairs at the University of Virginia School of Law, in a lecture on the emergence of global constitutionalism and whether universal norms--such as human rights--ought to apply to constitutions around the world or whether constitutions are ultimately contingent upon a nation's history, traditions, and culture. Program recorded on 4/29/10.
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A Free Press for a New Century
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, May 14, 2010
Lee Bollinger, President of Columbia University and one of the nation’s foremost experts on the First Amendment, joins the Center to discuss his book, Uninhibited, Robust, and Wide-Open: A Free Press for a New Century, and to explore the history of a free press in America. Bollinger also sheds light on the meaning of freedom of the press in our globalized, internet-dominated era. Bill Marimow, editor of The Philadelphia Inquirer, moderates. Program recorded on 4/21/10.
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A More Perfect Union: Confronting America's Racial Divide
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, April 20, 2010
On the two-year anniversary of then-Senator Barack Obama’s pivotal campaign speech, "A More Perfect Union," Gwen Ifill, moderator and managing editor of "Washington Week" and senior correspondent for "The PBS Newshour," Martin Luther King, III, Founding President and CEO of Realizing the Dream, Inc., and Dr. Thomas J. Sugrue, David Boies Professor of History and Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania, joined the National Constitution Center for an open dialogue on race, moderated by Dr. Charles A. Williams III, assistant clinical professor and director of the Center for the Prevention of School-Aged Violence at Drexel University. Before joining the panel, Dr. Michael L. Lomax, President and CEO of UNCF (the United Negro College Fund), begins the conversation with a presentation proposing that education leads America’s racial priorities. Program recorded on 3/04/10.
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Free Press and Free Speech in Iran
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, April 06, 2010
The National Constitution Center presents Newsweek International's Maziar Bahari and Dr. Hamid Dabashi, Professor of Iranian Studies at Columbia University, in a conversation moderated by the Philadelphia Inquirer's Trudy Rubin about the growing unrest in Iran and the future of free speech and a free press in the Islamic Republic. This program was presented in conjunction with the Philadelphia Free Library's One Book, One Philadelphia initiative, which chose Marjane Satrapi's "The Complete Persepolis," a memoir of growing up as a girl in revolutionary Iran, as the 2010 featured selection. Program recorded on 3/04/10.
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The Constitution and "The Long War"
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, March 30, 2010
Yale Law School Professor Bruce Ackerman, former Army vice chief of staff General Jack Keane, and Brigadier General H. R. McMaster, join the Center for a timely conversation with moderator Terry Moran of ABC News about maintaining our constitutional balance in a protracted war. If we are indeed in an age of persistent conflict, can we maintain the Constitution’s prized balance of power, or must the executive, in a permanent state of emergency, have expanded power to act without significant participation by Congress or the courts? This program is presented as part of the 2010 Peter Jennings Conference for Journalists and the Constitution. Program recorded on 2/27/10.
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Finding the Children of Slaves
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, March 22, 2010
Newsweek’s Sana Butler discusses her new book Sugar of the Crop, an account of her ten year odyssey to find and interview the last surviving children of American slaves. Butler discusses how freed slaves raised their children in the years following the end of the Civil War, and details a race against time to crisscross the country to reveal the hopes and dreams of the first generation of free African Americans. Butler reveals what she calls an immigrant mentality black parents carried after 1865 as they believed in the Constitution and the potential of a new America. Program recorded on 2/22/10.
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David Walker: Comeback America
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, March 8, 2010
Former Comptroller General of the United States and head of the U.S. Government Accountability Office David M. Walker joins the Center to discuss his important new book, Comeback America: Turning the Country Around and Restoring Fiscal Responsibility. For years, Walker warned Congress–and the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations–that America faced a large and growing fiscal imbalance due largely to known demographic trends and rising health care costs. Unfortunately, the numbers have gotten worse and our fiscal gap has grown dramatically in recent years. Moderated by Steve Cordasco, host of "Big Money with Steve Cordasco" which airs in Philadelphia and Boston on Saturday and Sunday mornings on The Big Talker, 1210AM. Program recorded on 2/3/10.
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Richard Reeves: Daring Young Men
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, February 18, 2010
A conversation with acclaimed presidential biographer Richard Reeves about his new book, Daring Young Men: The Heroism and Triumph of the Berlin Airlift. Reeves recounts the stories of the brave pilots who risked their lives to supply humanitarian aid to those who were considered enemies only a few short years earlier during World War II. Utilizing previously unpublished documents and numerous interviews, Reeves provides a voice for these pilots to tell their stories. Thomas Childers, Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania, moderates. Program recorded on 1/13/10.
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The Will of the People: The Supreme Court and the American Public
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, February 12, 2010
The National Constitution Center and the University of Pennsylvania Law School present law professors Lee Epstein of Northwestern, Barry Friedman of NYU and Jeffrey Rosen of George Washington University in a conversation about the Supreme Court’s relationship to American popular opinion. The program centers on Professor Friedman’s thesis from his new book, The Will of the People, which states that the justices and the people are partners in a “marriage†that sidesteps the two elected branches. Friedman does not argue that the justices and the people are always in agreement, "but rather that they come into line with one another over time.†Veteran Supreme Court watcher and SCOTUSblog correspondent Lyle Denniston moderates. Program recorded on 1/29/10.
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Aristocracy and the Founders
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, January 06, 2010
Gordon S. Wood, Brown University Professor of History Emeritus and Chair of the National Constitution Center’s Distinguished Scholars Advisory Panel, discusses the Founders’ attitudes and beliefs about aristocracy in America, where “titles of nobility†are prohibited by the Constitution, but where aristocratic elements of privilege and power nevertheless have survived. The men who espoused the radical idea that all are created equal shared the tradition of British aristocracy, and Wood examines how their beliefs differed from or mirrored those held in England, which beliefs have lingered, and what their effects have been. Program recorded on 12/07/09.
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Joan Biskupic on Justice Antonin Scalia
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, December 22, 2009
Even as Democrats have taken control of the White House and Congress, a conservative bloc remains in control of the Supreme Court, with Antonin Scalia as its central figure. Veteran Supreme Court correspondent Joan Biskupic discusses her new book, American Original, and introduces us to Justice Scalia, a proponent of “textualism†in interpreting the Constitution and a champion of social conservatives. Combative and gregarious, Scalia is the Court’s most dynamic personality and lightning rod for liberal complaint. Marcia Coyle, Chief Washington Correspondent for The National Law Journal, moderates. Program recorded on 11/18/09.
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American Aristocracy
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, December 14, 2009
The Constitution states that "no title of nobility shall be granted by the United States," and yet Americans continue to celebrate their dynastic families. The National Constitution Center and KYW News Radio present a program with bestselling author Sally Bedell Smith and journalist Vincent Bzdek about American aristocracies – families synonymous with long-lived power and privilege, including the Kennedys and the Clintons, in context of British royalty, such as Princess Diana. This program was presented in conjunction with the Constitution Center's “Diana: A Celebration†exhibit showcasing the life and work of the Princess of Wales. Program recorded on 11/02/09.
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Tina Brown on Aristocracy and Celebrity
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, December 09, 2009
The National Constitution Center presents a series of programs in support of its "Diana: A Celebration" exhibit, exploring the theme of aristocracy from the time of our nation’s founding to the present day. Daily Beast editor Tina Brown joins us for a conversation about Princess Diana and her dramatic impact in creating the rise of celebrity culture. Lady Diana Spencer, a member of one of England’s most distinguished families, entered the public stage at a moment when British media was entering a racier age. The paparazzi found a willing subject in the young aristocrat, and Diana proved to be gifted at manipulating the media and gaining power from publicity. This program is presented as part of the Knight Constitutional Conversations series, generously underwritten by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. Program recorded on 10/13/09.
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Michael Sandel on Justice
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, November 30, 2009
Michael Sandel, the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Government Theory at Harvard University and member of the National Constitution Center’s Distinguished Scholars Advisory Panel, delivers a provocative lecture of moral and political philosophy based on his latest book, "Justice: What We Owe One Another as Citizens—and How We Can Think About It Together." In this program, Sandel raises philosophical questions and challenges our way of thinking on issues such as individual rights and the claims of community, equality and inequality, morality and the rule of law, considering familiar controversies in fresh and illuminating ways. Program recorded on 10/06/09.
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The Amazing Journey of American Women
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, November 19, 2009
The National Constitution Center presents New York Times columnist Gail Collins in a discussion about her book, When Everything Changed: The Amazing Journey of American Women From 1960 to the Present. Collins traces the experience of American women from the 1960s, when wives needed to get their husbands’ permission to apply for a credit card, to recent events, including Hillary Clinton’s historic run for President and Sarah Palin's run for Vice President of the United States. Collins covers fashion, pop culture, economics, politics, work, and families to highlight the last fifty years of women’s history. Program recorded on 10/26/09.
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A Moderated Conversation on Health Care
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, November 12, 2009
The effort to reform the nation’s health care system is at the center of a serious and sometimes heated national debate. As Congress and the Obama administration struggle to agree on the nature of reform, the National Constitution Center hosts a moderated discussion on health care with former Senators Rick Santorum and Harris Wofford. Senators Santorum and Wofford bring years of experience in government, deep knowledge about health care reform, and share a desire for a civil conversation on this important subject. CNN Political Editor Mark Preston moderates. Program recorded on 11/09/09.
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A Right to Marry? Same-Sex Marriage and the Constitution
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, November 05, 2009
In November, 2008 California voters approved the Proposition 8 ballot measure, amending their state Constitution to ban marriages between same-sex couples. With a potentially precedent-setting legal challenge to Prop 8 working its way through the federal court system, the National Constitution Center presents a timely program on the issue of same-sex marriage. A lawsuit filed on behalf of two gay couples wishing to marry has attracted national attention. David Boies, one of the leading lawyers in the case, is joined in a conversation by Keith Boykin, editor of The Daily Voice, Maggie Gallagher, president of the National Organization for Marriage, and Glenn Stanton, Director for Family Formation Studies at Focus on the Family. NPR's Margot Adler moderates. Program recorded on 10/20/09.
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Taylor Branch: The Clinton Tapes
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, October 22, 2009
Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Taylor Branch discusses his account of President Bill Clinton’s confidential diary project conducted between 1993 and 2001. The Clinton Tapes provides a glimpse into the thought process and concerns of a sitting president and is based on 2,600 pages of material from the 78 sessions between the two men. Clinton shares spontaneous observations and personal details about events including war in Bosnia, health reform failure, anti-terrorist strikes, the 1996 re-election campaign, and Whitewater investigations culminating in his 1999 impeachment trial. Program recorded on 10/05/09.
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A Supreme Court Preview: Changing Court, New Controversy
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, October 12, 2009
Each new term of the Supreme Court brings fresh controversy to the Justices, and that pattern will be followed as the Justices return this fall from a summer recess. The Court that has reassembled is itself "new," joined by Sonia Sotomayor, the first Hispanic Justice and the third woman to sit on the Court. The National Constitution Center presents a discussion of the changing Court and the major disputes awaiting the Court's attention with Paul D. Clement, partner at King & Spalding and the 43rd Solicitor General of the United States, John Payton, President and Director-Counsel of the NAACP's Legal Defense Fund, and Lyle Denniston, veteran Supreme Court reporter with SCOTUSblog. Program recorded on 09/28/09.
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The Presidential Elections in Afghanistan and Iran
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, September 29, 2009
2009 is and continues to be the International Year of the Election. Elections in Iran in June and their aftermath caught the world’s attention, while in August, Afghanistan’s second presidential elections since the Taliban era has raised important questions about the democratic process in that country. In each case, elections have an influence on the political dynamics in their respective countries, as well as reflecting the progress of, and the prospects for, U.S. policy goals. What do the election results and the reaction to them say about domestic politics in these countries, and what kind of a partner can the U.S. expect to have in these countries over the next five years? The National Constitution Center and The University of Pennsylvania Law School welcome Visiting Scholar Barnett Rubin, Michael Singh, former senior director for the Middle East at the National Security Council, and moderator Trudy Rubin. Program recorded on 09/21/09.
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Tom Ridge: The Test of Our Times
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, September 21, 2009
Governor Tom Ridge joins the National Constitution Center to discuss The Test of Our Times: America Under Siege…And How We Can Be Safe Again, a memoir of his time as secretary of Homeland Security. Writing with praise and criticism for both Democrats and Republicans, Ridge recounts the politics in and around the Bush administration, offering candor on both the successes and missteps of the Department of Homeland Security and the challenges faced in his new post. Author, journalist and policy advisor Tony Blankley moderates. This program is sponsored by Cozen O'Connor, as part of the Knight Constitutional Conversation Series, which has been generously underwritten by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. Program recorded on 09/14/09.
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6th Annual Templeton Lecture: Health Care, Choice or Mandate?
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, June 27, 2008
The Annual John M. Templeton, Jr. Lecture showcases the best constitutional minds in America as they discuss economic liberties in a forum open to the public. The Sixth Annual Templeton Lecture, presented in partnership with AARP, considers the issue of health care and is delivered by Secretary Tommy Thompson, former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services and the 42nd Governor of Wisconsin, with a response from Senator Tom Daschle, former Senate Majority Leader from South Dakota, moderated by Douglas Kmiec, Caruso Family Chair in Constitutional Law at the Pepperdine University School of Law. Program recorded on 06/17/08.
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Into the Open: Architects in Conversation
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, August 21, 2009
The National Constitution Center, in partnership with Slought Foundation and the Community Design Collaborative, presents a dialogue between designer Teddy Cruz, whose photo narrative of the U.S.-Mexico border has been prominently displayed on front lawn of the Center, and Michael Sorkin, respected architecture critic and professor exploring the original ways architects are collaborating to foster civic engagement and build better communities. The program was recorded on 04/08/09.
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The Sound of Freedom: Marian Anderson and the Concert That Awakened America
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, August 12, 2009
2009 marks the 70th anniversary of one of the most dramatic concerts in American history: world famous African American contralto Marian Anderson’s concert at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington. In a conversation moderated by scholar Sheldon Hackney, award-winning historian Raymond Arsenault tells the story of Marian Anderson, one of the most enduring and iconic figures of the Civil Rights movement. Through immense raw talent and unrelenting determination, Anderson overcame racial prejudice to inspire all Americans and to become one of the greatest singers of her time. The program was recorded on 04/08/09.
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Founding Principles: The French Connection
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, August 03, 2009
The National Constitution Center welcomes Visiting Scholar A.E. Dick Howard, White Burkett Miller Professor of Law and Public Affairs at the University of Virginia School of Law, for a discussion about the founding periods in France and America, including how the U.S. constitutional experience influenced the debates on the first French Constitution and the divergence in French and American constitutionalism after those early years. This program is presented in conjunction with the Center's summer American history teacher workshop "A Revolution in Government" and the Center's summer exhibition, NAPOLÉON. The program was recorded on 07/20/09.
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The States of the Economy
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, July 27, 2009
The National Constitution Center hosted a unique public program, in partnership with the National Conference of State Legislatures, examining how states have responded to the current economic crisis. In particular, this discussion addresses the varied approaches among states, and their lawmakers, to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 with State Senator Don Balfour from Georgia; Joe Hackney, the Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives; and David Thornburgh, Executive Director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Fels Institute of Government. The program was moderated by Tom Ferrick, Jr. of the Philadelphia Inquirer and recorded on 07/19/09.
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A Supreme Court Review
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, July 15, 2009
Supreme Court correspondent Lyle Denniston leads a discussion with Miguel A. Estrada, partner in the Washington, D.C. office of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher and former Assistant to the Solicitor General of the United States, Dahlia Lithwick, senior editor and legal correspondent for Slate, and Richard H. Pildes, the Sudler Family Professor of Constitutional Law at New York University School of Law, about the most significant rulings of the 2008-2009 Supreme Court term and how these decisions will impact the lives of Americans. The program also addresses the announced retirement of Justice David H. Souter and how the nature of the Court might change when his successor joins the bench. This program is presented as part of the Knight Constitutional Conversations series. Program recorded on 07/08/09.
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Life, Liberty and Property: Four Years After the Kelo Decision
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, July 13, 2009
A conversation about Kelo v. City of New London four years after the Supreme Court's highly controversial 5-4 decision involving the use of eminent domain to transfer land from one private owner to another to further economic development. Since the 2005 decision, 40 states have passed legislation limiting the state government’s power of eminent domain for economic development. In practice, however, solutions have proven elusive. Guests include investigative journalist Jeff Benedict, author of Little Pink House: A True Story of Defiance and Courage, and attorneys Brian Blaesser and Scott Bullock. Veteran Supreme Court correspondent Lyle Denniston moderates. Program recorded on 06/10/2009.
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The Food of a Younger Land
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, July 01, 2009
Award-winning New York Times-bestselling author Mark Kurlansky takes us back to the food and eating habits of a younger America. In the 1930s, with the country gripped by the Great Depression and millions of Americans struggling to get by, President Franklin D. Roosevelt created the Federal Writers' Project under the New Deal as a make-work program for artists and authors. A number of writers, including Zora Neale Hurston and Eudora Welty were dispatched all across America to chronicle the eating habits, traditions, and struggles of local people. The project, called "America Eats," was abandoned in the early 1940s because of the World War and was never completed. This program is presented as part of the Knight Constitutional Conversations series. Program recorded on 05/14/2009.
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Impeached: The Trial of President Andrew Johnson
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, June 26, 2009
With the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, an old-fashioned southern Jacksonian Democrat of pronounced states' rights views became the seventeenth president of the United States. In a surprising turn of events, Andrew Johnson was charged with the reconstruction of the defeated South, including the extension of civil rights and suffrage to African American Southerners. It quickly became clear that the president supported the enactment of “black codes†and would block efforts to force Southern states to guarantee full equality for African Americans, igniting a fierce battle with congressional Republicans. Acclaimed author David O. Stewart returns to the Constitution Center to discuss the impeachment trial of President Johnson, which became the central battle of the struggle over how to reunite a nation after four years of war. Program recorded on 05/11/2009.
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Ida B. Wells and the African American Freedom Struggle
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, June 11, 2009
Historian Mia Bay and Pulitzer Prize-winning author Pamela Newkirk discuss the extraordinary life of Ida B. Wells, a fearless anti-lynching crusader, women’s rights advocate, journalist, and public speaker. Her refusal to accept any compromise on racial inequality labeled her a “dangerous radical†in her day, but made her a model for later civil rights activists, as well as a powerful influence for women in journalism. The Philadelphia Inquirer's Sandra D. Long moderates. Program recorded on 03/19/2009.
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The Culture That Gave Rise to the Current Financial Crisis
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, June 10, 2009
The Seventh Annual John M. Templeton, Jr. Lecture on Economic Liberties and the Constitution considers the social, cultural, and moral causes of the current financial crisis in the United States. To address these, and other related issues, the Center presents John C. Bogle, founder of the Vanguard Group and Chairman Emeritus of the National Constitution Center, with a response from Peter J. Wallison, Arthur F. Burns Fellow in Financial Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute. Moderating the program is Douglas Kmiec, the Caruso Family Chair and Professor of Constitutional Law at Pepperdine University's School of Law and a member of the Center’s Distinguished Scholars Advisory Panel. Program recorded on 05/13/2009.
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Plain, Honest Men: The Making of the American Constitution
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, June 08, 2009
The framers of our Constitution wrote a document that would live longer than they ever imagined and, more than two hundred years after it was written, debate about its interpretation still rages. From historian Richard Beeman comes a dramatic account of the men who met in Philadelphia during the summer of 1787 to design a radically new form of government. His latest book, Plain, Honest Men, takes readers behind the scenes and beyond the debate to show how the world’s most enduring constitution was forged through conflict, compromise, and, eventually, fragile consensus. Program recorded on 03/23/2009.
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Behind the Scenes: The Executive Response to 9/11
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, June 04, 2009
At 8:46 on the morning of September 11, 2001, our country became a nation transformed. President George W. Bush was faced with a crisis that created new demands on the Executive Branch not seen in our time and critical decisions were made during the first 24 hours that would test the constitutional limits of the President’s power. Find out what went on that day behind closed doors in the White House Situation Room, at the Pentagon, and on Air Force One from high-ranking members of the Bush Administration and key observers. This special program was presented as part of the National Constitution Center’s Peter Jennings Project for Journalists and the Constitution on 02/28/2009.
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August Wilson and the Century Cycle
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, May 22, 2009
August Wilson is one of the most influential and successful African American playwrights of the twentieth century. With the help of American theater scholar Walter Dallas, historian Nathaniel Norment, Jr., and a company of professional actors, the National Constitution Center presents a program that explores and celebrates Wilson’s work in relationship to the American theater and to the social, political and historical experience of African Americans. This program was presented in conjunction with the Center’s world premiere exhibition AMERICA I AM: The African American Imprint, and was recorded on 02/23/2009.
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Obama's First 100 Days
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, May 22, 2009
The National Constitution Center welcomes Politico's Carrie Budoff Brown, Stanley Greenberg, leading political strategist and author of Dispatches from the War Room, and Byron York, The Washington Examiner’s Chief Political Correspondent, to reflect on the policy decisions and political maneuvers during the first 100 days of the Obama administration. John Gizzi, Political Editor for Human Events, moderates. This program, presented as part of the Knight Constitutional Conversations series, was recorded on 04/27/2009.
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Philadelphia Talks: The Controller's Race
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, May 19, 2009
The National Constitution Center and Philadelphia magazine present "Philadelphia Talks" with the candidates for City Controller--John Braxton, Alan Butkovitz, Brett Mandel, and Al Schmidt--in a roundtable discussion about monitoring our City's spending. The program addresses how each candidate would rid city government of waste and fraud, their thoughts on the status of the city's pension and retirement funds and what can be done to return them to fiscal health, plus their ideas for innovative and concrete cost-saving opportunities in city government. The program, moderated by Philadelphia magazine editor Larry Platt, was recorded on 05/06/2009.
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Global Reach: How Constitutional Ideas Travel
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, May 15, 2009
President Bill Clinton, Chairman of the National Constitution Center, discusses how the American constitutional experience has influenced political thought and policy initiatives in other countries and the challenges of nurturing constitutionalism and democracy abroad. Jacques deLisle, Stephen A. Cozen Professor of Law, University of Pennsylvania, moderates the discussion. Program recorded on 04/28/09.
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The NAACP Centennial
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, April 13, 2009
Presented in conjunction with the National Constitution Center’s America I AM: The African American Imprint exhibition, the Center commemorates the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People Centennial. The NAACP is responsible for a number of victories in the struggle for justice and equality in America. Still vibrant today, the NAACP has an extraordinary history and it has had a profound impact on the country we live in today. Jabari Asim, Wendell Pritchett and Theodore Shaw join moderator Elmer Smith for this timely event. Program recorded on 02/11/09.
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The American Presidency
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, April 09, 2009
In honor of President's Day, 2009, historians William Leuchtenburg, Gary May and Timothy Naftali discuss presidential leadership, from the unexpected presidency of John Tyler, to the challenges Herbert Hoover confronted during the Great Depression, to the administration of George H.W. Bush and the end of the Cold War. Moderated by Princeton University Professor of History Sean Wilentz. Program recorded on 02/16/09.
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From Revolution to Evolution
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, March 30, 2009
In partnership with Art Sanctuary, the National Constitution Center presents a discussion with author Lorene Cary, professor Nathaniel Norment, and the Hon. John M. Younge about the Civil Rights revolution that led to the evolution of America's current president. The program explores the influence of Martin Luther King, Jr.; President-elect Obama’s book, "The Audacity of Hope"; and the connections to the Center's America I AM exhibition. 6abc’s Tamala Edwards moderates. Program recorded on 01/20/09.
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And Justice For All
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, March 26, 2009
As part of the National Constitution Center’s programming in support of the world debut of the America I AM: The African American Imprint exhibition, Mary Frances Berry joins us to tell the story of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, and her experience as chairperson, through its extraordinary fifty years at the heart of the civil rights movement and the struggle for justice in America. Program recorded on 02/03/09.
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Senator George McGovern on Abraham Lincoln
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, February 26, 2009
In a moment of national uncertainty and impending crisis, Abraham Lincoln took over the White House and led his country with vision and determination. In his new book on the sixteenth president, former U.S. Senator George McGovern writes that Lincoln’s presidency is the hinge on which American history pivots, the time when the young republic collapsed of its own contradictions and a new birth of freedom, sanctified by blood, created the United States we know today. His story has been told many times, but never by a man who himself sought the office of president and contemplated the awesome responsibilities that come with it. As part of the National Constitution Center’s celebration of the bicentennial of Lincoln’s birth, we welcome Senator McGovern for a conversation with moderator Sean Wilentz about one of our nation’s greatest presidents. Program recorded on 01/26/09.
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The Future of the Republican Party
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, February 05, 2009
The Republican Party, having lost two consecutive elections decisively, is at a critical juncture. Lines are being drawn by different camps within the party as new and established voices weigh in on the future of conservatism and the GOP. Two of those voices, Ramesh Ponnuru, senior editor for National Review, and Reihan Salam, associate editor at The Atlantic Monthly, discuss the party's future. Program recorded on 01/26/09.
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The Constitution Has Left the Building
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, January 28, 2009
Laurence H. Tribe, renowned constitutional law expert and former National Constitution Center Visiting Scholar, discusses his provocative new book on the Constitution and how it should be interpreted. In The Invisible Constitution, Tribe writes that there is a hidden and obscured constitution which is essential to understanding key meanings and many common beliefs about constitutional rights that the visible text alone cannot provide. Program recorded on 11/19/08.
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Legacy of 1808: Deconstructing Reconstruction
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, January 14, 2009
The Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments, popularly known as the “Reconstruction Amendments,†profoundly altered–among other things–the rights of individuals, the power of the federal government and the meaning of citizenship. To address the history and substance of the Reconstruction Amendments, and what those changes mean in our democracy today, the National Constitution Center welcomes 2008 Visiting Scholars Ted Shaw and Martha Jones, as well as special guest Steven Calabresi, for a discussion titled “Deconstructing Reconstruction.†This program is part of the Center’s Legacy of 1808 series and is presented in partnership with The American Constitution Society and the University of Pennsylvania Law School. Program recorded on 11/13/08.
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American Lion
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, January 13, 2009
At a moment when the American public is focused on how presidents lead the nation, the National Constitution Center welcomes Newsweek editor Jon Meacham for a discussion about his remarkable biography of President Andrew Jackson. "American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House" is an exciting portrait of one of our most important, yet least remembered presidents. Richard Beeman, professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania, moderates. Program recorded on 11/24/08.
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Lincoln: President Elect
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, January 13, 2009
The National Constitution Center welcomes back Harold Holzer, one of America’s most eminent Lincoln scholars and winner of the Lincoln Prize, to discuss the four months between Lincoln’s election and Inauguration when the president-elect made the most important decision of his coming presidency. In "Lincoln: President-Elect," the first book to concentrate on his public stance during these months, Holzer presents the momentous consequences when Abraham Lincoln first demonstrated his determination and leadership. Program recorded on 12/01/08.
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How would you address America?
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, January 07, 2009
As part of the Center's online initiative "Address America: Six Words to Inspire A Nation," journalist and author Robert Schlesinger moderates a conversation with former presidential speechwriters Mary Kate Cary and Terry Edmonds about the ideas, themes, and values the American public wishes to hear included in President-elect Barack Obama's Inaugural Address. Program recorded on 12/08/08.
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The Constitution: A Graphic Adaptation
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, December 15, 2008
The National Constitution Center presents veteran film and television writer Jonathan Hennessey to provide a groundbreaking way to see and read the United States Constitution. In The United States Constitution: A Graphic Adaptation, Hennessey uses the popular medium of graphic art to illustrate and breathe new life into our nation’s cornerstone principles. Program recorded on 10/22/08.
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The Legacy of 1808: Delta Blues
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, November 20, 2008
As part of its year long series commemorating the end to the trans-Atlantic slave trade, the National Constitution Center welcomes musician and historian Ted Gioia for a program featuring recordings from the Mississippi Delta and a discussion of how the Blues helped give shape to contemporary music and culture. Leading the discussion is Jonny Meister, host of “The Blues Show,†an award winning radio program on WXPN. Program recorded on 10/26/08.
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Give Me Liberty!
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, November 20, 2008
Influential author Naomi Wolf joins the National Constitution Center to discuss her timely new book, Give Me Liberty: A Handbook for American Revolutionaries, on utilizing personal freedom and democracy. Monica Yant Kinney, an award-winning metro columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer, moderates. Program recorded on 10/20/08.
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The National Security Constitution in an Age of Globalization
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, November 03, 2008
The National Constitution Center and the University of Pennsylvania Law School welcome Harold Koh, the Dean of Yale Law School and Gerard C. and Bernice Latrobe Smith Professor of International Law, to deliver the 51st Annual Owen J. Roberts Memorial Lecture, “The National Security Constitution in an Age of Globalization.†Program recorded on 09/15/08.
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Are American Elections Truly Democratic?
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, October 31, 2008
The National Constitution Center, in conjunction with the University of Pennsylvania’s program on Democracy, Citizenship and Constitutionalism, welcomes two distinguished scholars, Harvard University’s Dennis F. Thompson and Stanford Law School’s Pamela S. Karlan, to address the timely and provocative question: "Are American Elections Truly Democratic?" Program recorded on 09/25/08.
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Carly Fiorina on the Future of the American Economy
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, October 27, 2008
Carly Fiorina, Chairman and CEO of Fiorina Enterprises and Victory ’08 Chairman for the Republican National Committee, joins the National Constitution Center for our "Election 08: The Power of We" series to discuss the economic challenges facing the country and the next President. Program recorded on 10/13/08.
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Neither Red nor Blue: Libertarian Voters in the 2008 Presidential Election
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, October 20, 2008
As part of the National Constitution Center’s "Election ‘08: The Power of We" series, Bob Barr, Libertarian Party candidate for President, and the Cato Institute’s Executive Vice President David Boaz, explain libertarian perspectives and ideas, as well as the crucial role that will be played on November 4th, 2008 by millions of voters who view many key issues from a libertarian standpoint. Program recorded on 10/02/08.
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The Role of a Superpower
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, October 17, 2008
As part of the National Constitution Center’s "Election ‘08: The Power of We" series, former National Security Advisors Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft speak with The Washington Post's David Ignatius about foreign policy and the global challenges facing the next President of the United States. Program recorded on 09/22/08.
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Funding and Monitoring America’s Health
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, October 17, 2008
Today, science and technology have opened the doors to constitutional debate about federal health policy, medical ethics and individual freedom that our founders could never have foreseen. To address this complex issue, United States Senator Arlen Specter and Dr. Frank Torti, FDA Principal Deputy Commissioner and Chief Scientist, discuss our government’s role in evaluating and regulating America's medical products, specifically in the area of cancer research. The Philadelphia Inquirer's John Timpane moderates. This program is part of the Cephalon Speaker Series for Science and the Constitution, a partnership between Cephalon, Inc. and the National Constitution Center intended to attract local and national experts to discuss constitutional issues pertaining to science, public policy and the law. Program recorded on 09/14/08.
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Can Perestroika Survive?
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, October 09, 2008
In a special companion program to the awarding of the 2008 Liberty Medal to former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, the National Constitution Center presents a conversation with Jack Matlock, Jr., U.S. ambassador to the U.S.S.R., 1987 – 1991, and Leon Aron, Director of Russian studies at the American Enterprise Institute, that examines Gorbachev's reforms, the direction Russia was heading in when he stepped down from office in 1991, and how that compares to the leadership and vision of Vladimir Putin today. Program recorded on 09/10/08.
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Philadelphia Talks: The Journey from High School to Higher Ed
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, October 02, 2008
The National Constitution Center and Philadelphia magazine present a special “Philadelphia Talks†program about public education and the journey from high school to higher education, featuring Benjamin Herold, director of the documentary film, "First Person," winner of the Best Documentary (Festival of Independents) in the 2008 Philadelphia Film Festival, and Philadelphia Academies, Inc. President Lisa Nutter, First Lady of Philadelphia. Program recorded on 09/08/08.
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Elizabeth Edwards and the Future of American Healthcare
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, September 30, 2008
The National Constitution Center presents a special evening with Elizabeth Edwards, Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress and cancer survivor, as she shares her own thoughts on the American healthcare system and assess the health care policies of the presidential candidates. This program is presented as part of the "Election 08: The Power of We" series to promote active, informed citizenship during the 2008 presidential election with generous support from lead sponsor Daniel Berger. Program recorded on 09/16/08.
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The Legacy of 1808: Slavery and the Literary Imagination
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Author: National Constitution Center Thurs, August 28, 2008
For the July installment of the National Constitution Center’s Legacy of 1808 series, three accomplished writers join us for a conversation examining slavery through fiction and scholarship. Fiction and non-fiction writers have different constraints on what stories they tell, but the story-telling techniques they sometimes share are powerful tools for stimulating the historical imagination. “Slavery and the Literary Imagination†features Lorene Cary, educator, social activist and author of The Price of a Child, Lawrence Hill, critically-acclaimed author of Someone Knows My Name, and Beverly Lowry, director of the Creative Nonfiction Program at George Mason University and author of Harriet Tubman: Imagining a Life. Program recorded on 07/16/08.
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On the Eve of the Olympics: The United States and China
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, August 22, 2008
The National Constitution Center presents a discussion about the complicated, and often fraught, relationship between the United States and China. The conversation connects to the sweeping, four-part series examining contemporary China, "Koppel on China: The People’s Republic of Capitalism" produced by veteran broadcaster Ted Koppel which aired on the Discovery Channel in July, 2008. Program recorded on 07/08/08.
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The Legacy of 1808: Modern-Day Slavery
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Author: National Constitution Center Thurs, August 21, 2008
The National Constitution Center presents a frank conversation about the existence of modern-day slavery with journalist E. Benjamin Skinner, author of A Crime So Monstrous: Face-to-Face with Modern-Day Slavery and moderator Carolyn Davis. Program recorded on 06/09/08.
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Richard Brookhiser: George Washington's Leadership
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, August 04, 2008
Journalist and historian Richard Brookhiser returns to the National Constitution Center for a timely conversation about America’s first president as the nation examines the major party candidates in an effort to assess who can best lead the country. Program recorded on 06/23/08.
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Robert Schlesinger: White House Ghosts
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, August 01, 2008
Veteran Washington reporter Robert Schlesinger joins the National Constitution Center to open a fresh and revealing window into the modern presidency from FDR to George W. Bush through the perspective of their speechwriters. Drawing on his new book, White House Ghosts: Presidents and Their Speechwriters, Schlesinger discusses the crucial and often hidden role played by the men and women who help presidents find the words they hope will define their places in history. Program recorded on 06/26/08.
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Howard Fineman: The Thirteen American Arguments
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, July 22, 2008
Howard Fineman, the highly respected political journalist, joins the National Constitution Center to discuss his absorbing new work of American history, journalism, and analysis "The Thirteen American Arguments." Fineman writes that every debate we have had in the political arena, from our founding to today, has evolved from one of these arguments. Though the conventional wisdom is that Americans argue too much, Fineman believes that just the opposite is true. Fineman finds many of these basic arguments are tied to the U.S. Constitution, from the Preamble being written in the name of “We the People,†to who determines what the law is. Program recorded on 05/20/08.
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The Legacy of 1808: The Lincoln and Douglas Debates
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, July 16, 2008
The National Constitution Center welcomes historian Allen Guelzo, two-time winner of the prestigious Lincoln Prize and author of Lincoln & Douglas: The Debates that Defined America, a new account honoring the 150th anniversary of the debates that made Lincoln a national figure and defined the slavery issue that would bring our country to Civil War. Program recorded on 05/13/08.
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The Legacy of 1808: The Emancipation Proclamation Defined
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, June 27, 2008
The National Constitution Center is now home to a rare printing of the Emancipation Proclamation signed by Abraham Lincoln. The Proclamation is considered the most important document issued by one of the greatest presidents in U.S. history. Along with the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, the Emancipation Proclamation is a national treasure. What has established this document in the public memory? What is its influence and impact upon African Americans and, indeed, all Americans? This program, with leading scholars Harold Holzer and Robert F. Engs, presents two perspectives on this iconic document. Program recorded on 02/26/08.
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6th Annual Templeton Lecture: Health Care, Choice or Mandate?
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, June 27, 2008
The Annual John M. Templeton, Jr. Lecture showcases the best constitutional minds in America as they discuss economic liberties in a forum open to the public. The Sixth Annual Templeton Lecture, presented in partnership with AARP, considers the issue of health care and is delivered by Secretary Tommy Thompson, former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services and the 42nd Governor of Wisconsin, with a response from Senator Tom Daschle, former Senate Majority Leader from South Dakota, moderated by Douglas Kmiec, Caruso Family Chair in Constitutional Law at the Pepperdine University School of Law. Program recorded on 06/17/08.
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The Legacy of 1808: “Iron Ladies of Liberiaâ€
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, June 19, 2008
The National Constitution Center and The Independent Television Service (ITVS) present a discussion about the history of Liberia and its current policy aimed at preventing a descent into civil war, with Teta V. Banks, the Honorary Consul General of the Republic of Liberia, and Amie Sarnor, a 16 year old native of Liberia and sophomore at Constitution High School in Philadelphia. Program recorded on 02/20/2008.
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Baseball: The Melting Pot
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, June 06, 2008
America has always struggled to live up to ideals expressed in the Declaration of Independence and the freedoms written by the Founding Fathers in the Constitution. Nowhere has this idea played out more visibly than on the baseball field where men and women have fought to cross racial, cultural, and gender barriers for the equal opportunity to play the game. In conjunction with our spring 2008 exhibit, Baseball as America, the National Constitution Center presents “Baseball: The Melting Pot,†a special conversation about the ways in which the game of baseball has served as a reflection of our social tensions as well as ideals, and our struggle to become a more inclusive society. Program recorded on 04/28/2008.
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18 in ‘08
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, June 04, 2008
A discussion with college filmmaker David Burstein, director of the documentary 18 in '08 featuring interviews with many of today’s most influential politicians, as well as popular culture figures, political activists, media commentators, and student leaders. The film is a call to young people to overturn traditional under-representation in election campaigns, get involved in the political process, and vote. Program recorded on 04/19/2008.
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The Legacy of 1808: Traces of the Trade
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, May 29, 2008
The National Constitution Center, in partnership with the Philadelphia Film Festival, presents a discussion with filmmaker Katrina Browne, director of "Traces of the Trade: A Story from the Deep North," and her cousin Thomas DeWolf, author of the new memoir "Inheriting the Trade," who together share the story of their ancestors, the largest slave-trading family in U.S. history. Program recorded on 04/24/2008.
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Red, White, Blue and Green: The Global Environment with Jeffrey Sachs
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, May 19, 2008
A special Earth Day program in the Red, White, Blue and Green speaker series, featuring leading international economic advisor Jeffrey D. Sachs, author of the New York Times bestseller, The End of Poverty, and the new book, Common Wealth: Economics for a Crowded Planet. Considered one of the world’s greatest economists, Sachs provides an assessment of the environmental factors that threaten global prosperity, and a practical set of solutions based on a new economic paradigm for a crowded planet. Bill Blakemore of ABC News moderates. Program recorded on 04/22/2008.
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Fair Game, with Valerie Plame Wilson
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, May 01, 2008
The National Constitution Center welcomes Valerie Plame Wilson to discuss her autobiography, Fair Game: My Life as a Spy, My Betrayal by the White House. Plame Wilson provides her perspective on the public disclosure of her identity as a CIA officer and the federal investigation that led to the trial and conviction of Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, Scooter Libby. Trudy Rubin of the Philadelphia Inquirer moderates. Program recorded on 02/05/2008.
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War's Youngest Victims
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, May 01, 2008
To help us understand the many different challenges young people face on the battlefield and in periods of reconciliation, and to put the experiences of Sudanese "Lost Boy" Valentino Achak Deng and the words of author Dave Eggers into perspective, the National Constitution Center honors the One Book, One Philadelphia initiative with a conversation about the role of governments and their citizens to protect war's youngest victims. Program recorded on 03/19/2008.
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What's Your Primary Concern?
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Apr 28, 2008
This "Election 08: The Power of We" podcast goes to the heart of the primary process: Is it fair? Should it be changed? If so, how? A distinguished panel of political insiders, including Bay Buchanan, Pedro A. Cortés, Thomas "Tad" Devine, Chris Henick and Meredith White respond to citizen ideas on reform. Program recorded on 04/02/2008.
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Red, White, Blue & Green: Sustainable Cities
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Apr 28, 2008
To help us understand how all citizens play a role in addressing the environmental challenges of the 21st century, the National Constitution Center and Philadelphia magazine proudly welcome Mayor Michael Nutter of Philadelphia and Mayor John Janssen of Greensburg, KS for a special "Philadelphia Talks" program titled “Sustainable Cities,†the second event in the Center's Red, White, Blue & Green series. Program recorded on 04/09/2008.
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Red, White, Blue & Green: The Business of Going Green
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Apr 28, 2008
Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich joins several executives engaged in the business of "going green" to address the environmental challenges of the 21st century. This is the first in a new series of programs called Red, White, Blue & Green about unique constitutional issues pertaining to environmental policy and stewardship. Program recorded on 03/20/2008.
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Choices and Challenges in the New Age of Life Sciences
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Apr 28, 2008
The Cephalon Speaker Series for Science and the Constitution is a partnership between Cephalon, Inc. and the National Constitution Center intended to attract local and national experts to discuss constitutional issues pertaining to science, public policy and the law. The second program in the series, “Choices and Challenges in the New Age of Life Sciences,†is a conversation with bio-ethicists and legal scholars about how new scientific knowledge and privacy matters will conflict in the future. Program recorded on 03/17/2007.
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The Peter Jennings Project for Journalists and the Constitution: Women and the Law
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Author: National Constitution Center Thurs, Apr 10, 2008
As part of the Peter Jennings Project, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sherrilyn Ifill, Elena Kagan, and Gene Pratter will participate on a panel discussing the successes, continued challenges and emerging issues, faced by women in the legal profession. In a conversation moderated by ABC News correspondent Lynn Sherr, these distinguished jurists and scholars will consider whether women read the Constitution differently than men, if there is such a thing as women's "justice,†what are the unintended consequences of women’s equality are shaped by the law, and why women have advanced more quickly than African Americans in the field. Program recorded on 03/08/2008.
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The Legacy of 1808: A Historical Perspective
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Author: National Constitution Center Weds, Mar 12, 2008
On January 1, 1808, the United States Congress prohibited the importation of slaves to America as allowed by Article 1, Section 9 of the United States Constitution. To mark the 200th anniversary of this historic legislation, and to help us understand the political and cultural climate surrounding the issue of slavery in the early decades of the republic, the National Constitution Center proudly welcomes 2008 visiting scholar Martha S. Jones and Howard Ohline, a prestigious scholar of American history, to place the legacy of slavery into legal and historical context. Stephanie McCurry, Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania, moderates the conversation. Program recorded on 02/11/2008.
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From Philly to Baghdad to the United States Congress with Representative Patrick Murphy
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Author: National Constitution Center Thurs, Mar 06, 2008
The National Constitution Center welcomes U.S. Rep. Patrick J. Murphy, the first Iraq War veteran to be elected to the United States Congress. Murphy’s new book, Taking the Hill: From Philly to Baghdad to the United States Congress, highlights his love for family and the belief that the American dream is still within reach. Marjorie Margolies moderates. Program recorded on 02/18/2008.
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Anthony Lewis on the First Amendment
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Feb 13, 2008
The National Constitution Center welcomes two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Anthony Lewis, one of the country’s most esteemed experts on the First Amendment and the author of the classic Gideon’s Trumpet, to share his latest work, Freedom for the Thought That We Hate on the importance of freedom of expression. Program recorded on 01/14/2008.
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The New American Story with Senator Bill Bradley and Matt Bai
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Feb 06, 2008
The National Constitution Center welcomes Senator Bill Bradley–bestselling author, New York Knicks star, and former presidential candidate–for a conversation about what it will take to make America a better, stronger, truer country. With Matt Bai, national political writer for the New York Times Magazine, moderating the conversation, the 2008 presidential primaries and the American political landscape will also be discussed. Program recorded on 01/22/2008.
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Regulating the Practice of Medicine
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Jan 16, 2008
The Cephalon Speaker Series for Science and the Constitution is a partnership between Cephalon, Inc. and the National Constitution Center intended to attract local and national experts to discuss constitutional issues pertaining to science, public policy and the law. The first program in the series, “Regulating the Practice of Medicine,†is a conversation with industry insiders about how business and government promote, regulate, pay for and prohibit products in the health care industry. Program recorded on 12/11/2007.
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The Kennedys: Portrait of a Family
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Author: National Constitution Center Thurs, Jan 03, 2008
In 1961, world-renowned photographer Richard Avedon took some intimate and illuminating images of the Kennedy family on the eve of John F. Kennedy’s inauguration, only six of which have ever been seen. The National Constitution Center welcomes Shannon Thomas Perich, author of the new book The Kennedys: Portrait of a Family, to reveal the photographs never seen outside the Smithsonian collection and to share the story of a First Family on the brink of history. Dr. Myra Gutin, an expert on the history of first ladies, moderates the conversation. Program recorded on 10/30/2007.
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Children Under the Constitution
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Jan 02, 2008
The National Constitution Center, in partnership with the Juvenile Law Center, honors the fortieth anniversary of the In re Gault Supreme Court decision--determining that proceedings for juveniles had to comply with the requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment--with a conversation about the state of children’s rights under the Constitution then and now. Program recorded on 11/07/2007.
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Ken Burns: The War
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Dec 31, 2007
A special Veteran’s Day 2007 event with award winning documentary filmmaker and author Ken Burns, director of the new film series The War on PBS. Burns, who also co-wrote the companion volume The War: An Intimate History, will share the American experience of World War II through the words and deeds of those who made history on the battlefields and on the home front. These vivid accounts of ordinary men and women who experienced—and helped to win—the most extraordinary war in history truly encapsulates the meaning of “We, The People.†Program recorded on 11/12/2007.
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Faith, Politics and the Constitution
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Author: National Constitution Center Thurs, Dec 27, 2007
The National Constitution Center hosts a conversation about the role of religion in government and the influence of religious conservatives in politics, featuring Kathleen Kennedy Townsend and Peter A. Lillback. Townsend, author of Failing America’s Faithful, argues that for too long, the subject of religion has become polarized – politicized by the right and largely ignored by the left. In contrast Lillback, author of Wall of Misconception, counters the claims that Christianity must only reside in the walls of the church by pointing to the religious beliefs of America's Founding Fathers. John DiIulio of the University of Pennsylvania, the first director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, moderates the discussion. Program recorded on 12/17/2007.
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Boom!: Personal Reflections on the Sixties and Today with Tom Brokaw
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Author: National Constitution Center Thurs, Dec 27, 2007
Tom Brokaw, bestselling author and veteran broadcaster, discusses his book Boom! Personal Reflections on the Sixties and Today. As he did with The Greatest Generation, Brokaw brings to life another pivotal time in American history: the 1960s. In Boom!, the veteran news anchor surveys how famous people, ordinary citizens, and national mindset were all affected by an unforgettable time of turbulence and change. Andrea Mitchell, Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent for NBC News, moderated this conversation. Program recorded on 11/28/2007.
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StoryCorps founder Dave Isay
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Dec 17, 2007
StoryCorps founder Dave Isay discusses the most ambitious oral history project in American history and his new book, "Listening Is an Act of Love: A Celebration of American Life from the StoryCorps Project," a tapestry of the stories Americans have been sharing from their lives, capturing for posterity the issues that define us as “We, the People.†A special introduction provided by NPR's Terry Gross, host of "Fresh Air." Program recorded on 12/04/2007.
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Mr. Jefferson's Women
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Dec 12, 2007
Growing up in a home surrounded by his mother and six sisters, young Thomas Jefferson learned that homemaking was the sole realm for women. According to historian Jon Kukla, however, Jefferson’s vision of women changed little as he matured. Kukla joins the National Constitution Center for a timely examination of Jefferson’s attitudes toward women in his life as well as their place in American politics and society. Program recorded on 10/08/2007.
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Is the Constitution Outdated?
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Author: National Constitution Center Tuesday, Dec 4, 2007
Is the U.S. Constitution outdated? Has our nation outgrown our founding document or are we losing sight of the Framers’ intent? Do we need to regain our “constitutional conscience?†The National Constitution Center welcomes distinguished guests Larry J. Sabato, Michael Oreskes and Eric Lane to help answer these questions and to help determine whether our Constitution needs updating or greater fidelity to its guiding principles. Program recorded on 10/01/2007.
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Historian Stacy Cordery on Alice Roosevelt Longworth
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Author: National Constitution Center Monday, Nov 26, 2007
The National Constitution Center welcomes historian Stacy Cordery to discuss her intelligent new biography "Alice: Alice Roosevelt Longworth, from White House Princess to Washington Power Broker" and the uniquely American institution of the first family. Program recorded on 10/24/2007.
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Author Scott Turow
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Author: National Constitution Center Monday, Nov 26, 2007
The National Constitution Center and 1210 AM's Michael Smerconish's Book Club were joined by best-selling author Scott Turow for a conversation about his books, Limitations and Ordinary Heroes. Program recorded on 12/6/2006.
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"Law & Order" and the Constitution on TV
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Author: National Constitution Center Tuesday, Nov 20, 2007
David Black and Richard Sweren, two writers from the “Law and Order†franchise of crime shows, explore how crime writers deal with Constitutional issues. Do they care if they get it right? Does the public—especially lawyers--get angry when the writers get it wrong? Do they consult with constitutional experts? Do many crime writers have a background in the criminal justice system? Program recorded on 10/8/2006.
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Sidney Blumenthal: How Bush Rules
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Author: National Constitution Center Friday, Nov 16, 2007
Clinton presidential adviser Sidney Blumenthal discusses his book, How Bush Rules: Chronicles of a Radical Regime. A former assistant and senior adviser to President Bill Clinton, Blumenthal has authored a number of other books, including The Clinton Wars. He is a regular columnist for the Guardian of London and for Salon, and has been a staff writer for the New Yorker, the Washington Post, and other major publications. He is currently a Senior Fellow at the New York University Center on Law and Security. Program recorded on 11/1/2006.
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The Battle Against Terror: The Judicial Role
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Author: National Constitution Center Tuesday, Nov 6, 2007
For Constitution Day, 2007, the National Constitution Center and the University of Pennsylvania Law School welcomed Aharon Barak, professor of law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and former President of the Supreme Court of Israel, to deliver the 50th Annual Owen J. Roberts Memorial Lecture on the judicial role in the battle against terror. Program recorded on 9/17/2007.
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Voices for Liberty
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Author: National Constitution Center Monday, Nov 5, 2007
In a special companion program to the award of the 2007 Liberty Medal to Bono, U2 lead singer and activist, and DATA (Debt, AIDS, Trade, Africa), four distinguished guests join the National Constitution Center for a discussion about fighting disease and poverty on the African continent. Program recorded on 9/10/2007.
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Maintaining our Constitutional Balance
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Author: National Constitution Center Thursday, Nov 1, 2007
To help clarify the concept of executive privilege, the National Constitution Center proudly welcomes 2007 visiting scholars Laurence Tribe, Theodore Olson and University of Pennsylvania Professor of Political Science Rogers M. Smith to place recent events in the Bush administration into legal and historical context. Program recorded on 9/5/2007.
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Citizens' Constitutional Conversation with Kati Marton
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Author: National Constitution Center Friday, Oct 12, 2007
Reporter and best selling author Kati Marton joins the National Constitution Center for a Citizens’ Constitutional Conversation about her new book The Great Escape, the breathtaking story of nine extraordinary Jewish men from Nazi-controlled Budapest and their journey to the New World. Program recorded on 10/18/2006.
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Presidential Doodles
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Author: National Constitution Center Thurs, Oct 11, 2007
David Greenberg, Professor of History and Journalism at Rutgers University and author of Presidential Doodles: Two Centuries of Scribbles, Scratches, Squiggles & Scrawls from the Oval Office, provides meaning for drawings by the most powerful men in the world. Program recorded on 11/15/2006.
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Women and Faith in "Caroline or Change"
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Oct 10, 2007
As part of “Caroline Conversations,’ a series of community-minded events inspired by Tony Kushner's play, the National Constitution Center and the Arden Theater join female faith leaders from the African American and Jewish communities to discuss the themes and issues still relevant for women in our society today. Program recorded on 4/30/2007.
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Inside the Iraq War with The Washington Post’s Thomas Ricks
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Author: National Constitution Center Thurs, Sep 27, 2007
The Washington Post’s Thomas Ricks joins us for a vivid account of the invasion and occupation of Iraq as written in his critically acclaimed book, Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq, a finalist for the 2007 Pulitzer Prize. Program recorded on 8/2/2007.
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How a Democracy Confronts Genocide
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Sep 26, 2007
How does genocide happen, and what is the role of the United States and of other democracies around the world to stop it? Join the National Constitution Center for a timely conversation about genocide and the democratic system. Program recorded on 7/30/2007.
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Eyewitness: The View from Space
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Sep 19, 2007
Today, the United States continues to make significant advances in space travel and exploration, but issues of funding, international competition, and grass roots space tourism have clouded the once clear and unified mission in space. Program recorded on 7/19/2007.
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Philadelphia Talks: Political Reform
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, Sep 18, 2007
From ethics, to taxes, to Philadelphia culture, is the city ready for progress and political reform? Join the National Constitution Center and Philadelphia magazine for the next installment of "Philadelphia Talks," a series of unique discussions about the hottest issues confronting our city. We welcome some of Philadelphia’s leading advocates for change for a lively and engaging discussion about political reform. Program recorded on 4/18/2007.
Download File - 29.6 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Land of Lincoln
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Sep 17, 2007
Highly respected reporter and editor Andrew Ferguson joins the National Constitution Center for a conversation about his new book, Land of Lincoln, a curiosity-fueled coast-to-coast journey through contemporary Lincoln Nation. Program recorded on 6/28/2007.
Download File - 24.6 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Tom DeLay
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, Sep 13, 2007
Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay was one of the most powerful Congressional figures since Lyndon B. Johnson. For the first time, Tom DeLay visits the National Constitution Center to discuss his new memoir, No Retreat, No Surrender, offering us a look at how politics is really played at the highest levels. Ramesh Ponnuru, a senior editor at the National Review, moderates the conversation. Program recorded on 7/16/2007.
Download File - 30.9 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Inside Presidential Politics
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Sep 10, 2007
Robert M. Shrum is one of the biggest political insiders, and in his new memoir No Excuses: Concessions of a Serial Campaigner he exposes how the real decisions are made and battles for power fought. Moderating the conversation will be NPR senior correspondent Juan Williams. Program recorded on 6/21/2007.
Download File - 30.9 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Nixon and Kissinger
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Sep 4, 2007
Join the National Constitution Center for a revealing conversation about Richard Nixon and his advisor Henry Kissinger with authors Robert Dallek, James Reston, Jr., and David Greenberg. Bringing together this rare combination of expertise in American political history, culture, image and psychology, these distinguished experts will talk about how two unlikely partners in power not only altered American politics but changed how we perceive and remember our politicians. Program recorded on 6/26/2007.
Download File - 34.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Walter Isaacson on Albert Einstein
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Sep 4, 2007
Join the author of the acclaimed best-seller Benjamin Franklin for a conversation about his new book, Einstein: His Life and Universe. Moderating our conversation will be Newsweek's senior editor Sharon Begley. Program recorded on 6/4/2007.
Download File - 26.4 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Philadelphia Talks: Leadership
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Aug 27, 2007
Brian Tierney, chief executive of Philadelphia Media Holdings LLC and publisher of the Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News; nationally recognized chef Alison Barshak, owner of Alison at Blue Bell; Phil Martelli, St. Joseph’s University Men’s Basketball head coach; and Alba Martinez, President and Chief Executive Officer of United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania. Larry Platt, editor of Philadelphia magazine moderates. Program recorded on 3/26/2007.
Download File - 30.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Law and Order in 2015
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Jul 23, 2007
Lawyers Miguel Estrada and David Rudovsky argued a futuristic case before an equally-distinguished mock Supreme Court. The Chief Judge of the mock Supreme Court was Judith Kaye, Chief Judge of the State of New York. Other judges included Arlin Adams, former U.S. Court of Appeals judge; Christopher Lewis, BlankRome partner; Alfred Putnam, Drinker Biddle and Reath chairman; Marjorie O. Rendell U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals Judge; Kermit Roosevelt, University of Pennsylvania Law School Professor and Dolores Sloviter, U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals Chief Judge. Program recorded on 3/18/2007.
Download File - 29.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Should Terror Detainees Have the Right to Habeas Corpus?
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Jul 6, 2007
United States Representative Barney Frank (D-MA) and Senator Jon Kyl (R-AZ) will participate in a public debate about whether terror detainees have the right to habeas corpus, moderated by Ted Koppel at the National Constitution Center. Program recorded on 3/18/2007.
Download File - 29.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
General Anthony Zinni on Leadership
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Jul 6, 2007
As part of a two-day program on leadership, The National Constitution Center welcomes Philadelphia's own General Anthony Zinni for a discussion about his ideas on leading people toward a common goal based on his experience as a soldier, a four-star general, and the adviser to the State Department on Middle East peace. Most recently, General Zinni has been in the news for strongly stating his position that a hasty retreat from Iraq would be unwise—though he was a vigorous opponent of the Iraq war. He has aligned himself with Senator John McCain and President George W. Bush in advocating for a "surge" of troops in Baghdad. Tony Green, Executive Director of the Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association, will moderate the conversation. Program recorded on 3/27/2007.
Download File - 34.6 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Tavis Smiley
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Jul 6, 2007
The National Constitution Center and the Philadelphia Tribune welcome media personality and author Tavis Smiley for a Citizens’ Constitutional Conversation to discuss his new memoir, What I Know For Sure: My Story of Growing Up in America. Program recorded on 10/17/2006.
Download File - 37.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
The Summer of 1787
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Jul 6, 2007
The Summer of 1787 takes us into the sweltering room of Independence Hall where delegates struggled for four months to create the Constitution that has defined our nation for more than two centuries. The room was crowded with colorful and passionate characters, including Alexander Hamilton and Gouverneur Morris, as well as with steady but soft-spoken men like James Madison. At different points during that sultry summer, more than half of the delegates threatened to walk out, and some actually did, but George Washington’s quiet leadership and the delegates' inspired compromises held the Convention together. Program recorded on 4/24/2007.
Download File - 25.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Dred Scott v. Sanford, 150 Years Later
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Jun 18, 2007
Writing the majority opinion for The Supreme Court in the infamous Dred Scott v. Sanford case of 1856-1857, Chief Justice Roger Taney asserted that African Americans were not and never could be citizens of the United States. The Court's ruling sent shockwaves across the nation. To mark the 150th Anniversary of the Dred Scott v. Sanford decision, and to discuss the essential historical context and its enduring legacy, the National Constitution Center welcomes three leading scholars and experts to share insights on the case that would ultimately lead the United States into civil war. Program recorded on 5/15/2007.
Download File - 33.8 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Knocking
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, Jun 12, 2007
A discussion about Jehovah's Witnesses contribution to the strengthening of our constitutional rights with the film's director Joel Engardio, Daniel Mach, Director of Litigation at the ACLU's Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief, and moderated by University of Pennsylvania professor Stephen Dunning. Program recorded on 5/09/2007.
Download File - 18.9 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Immigration and Economic Liberty
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, Jun 12, 2007
The Fifth Annual John M. Templeton, Jr., Lecture on Economic Liberties and the Constitution considers the debate over immigration, which commanded national attention in 2006, affected the outcome of the mid-term elections and promises to be a contentious issue in the 110th Congress in 2007. The participants include Cardinal Roger Mahony, Archbishop of the Los Angeles Archdiocese, former Attorney General Edwin Meese III, and Douglas Kmiec of the Pepperdine University School of Law. The Annual John M. Templeton, Jr. Lecture showcases the best constitutional minds in America as they discuss economic liberties in a forum open to the public. Program recorded on 5/08/2007.
Download File - 41.3 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Presidential Courage
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Jun 8, 2007
Considered "the nation's leading Presidential historian" by Newsweek, Michael R. Beschloss is known for making political leaders past and present come alive with his riveting reportage. Beschloss joins the National Constitution Center on May 22, 2007, for a Citizens' Constitutional Conversation about his new book Presidential Courage: Brave Leaders and How They Changed America 1789-1989, which chronicles the moments when a courageous president dramatically changes the future of the United States. As the 2008 presidential campaign heats up, this book is sure to be an important guide in the choice for a new Commander in Chief. Moderating the discussion will be The Washington Post's David S. Broder. Program recorded on 5/22/2007.
Download File - 25.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Doro Bush Koch on George H.W. Bush
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Jun 8, 2007
Doro Bush Koch, daughter of George H.W. Bush and sister of George W. Bush, discusses the new memoir she has written about her father's life. For over half a century, President George H.W. Bush has played a part in American and world history. Bush served in Congress, headed the CIA, served as U.S. Liaison to China during Chairman Mao's rule, chaired the Republican National Committee during Watergate, and was Vice President during the administration of Ronald Reagan before becoming President in 1989. Having conducted hundreds of interviews with family members, world figures, and former American presidents, Koch has written a memoir of an American president and a chronicle of a rapidly changing nation. Program recorded on 10/15/2006.
Download File - 19.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Looking Back at the Civil Rights Years
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Jun 8, 2007
Join NPR reporter and commentator Juan Williams in a Citizens’ Constitutional Conversation. From 1954 to 1965, America experienced one of the most tumultuous and momentous periods in its history. Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren declared that separate educational facilities were "inherently unequal," overturning Plessy v. Ferguson; Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus squared off with President Dwight Eisenhower over admitting nine black students into Little Rock Central High School; White authorities violently attacked hundreds of civil rights marchers as they left Selma, Alabama on "Bloody Sunday." Today, events such as these continue to have resonance in a country where debates about social and political equality endure. Program recorded on 9/26/2006.
Download File - 32.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
The 51% Minority
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, May 8, 2007
Fox News commentator Lis Wiehl argues that while women make up the majority of our population, they are still relegated to minority status. Lis Wiehl is a prominent trial lawyer and the legal analyst on the Fox News Channel for Fox and Friends, Hannity and Colmes, and The O'Reilly Factor. She is also the co-host of The Radio Factor with Bill O'Reilly. Program recorded on 3/13/2007.
Download File - 26.9 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Presidents, Dictators and Scoundrels
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Apr 30, 2007
NBC's Andrea Mitchell, who began her journalism career in Philadelphia with KYW News Radio, participates in a Citizens' Constitutional Conversation about her memoir, Talking Back…To Presidents, Dictators, and Assorted Scoundrels. Program recorded on 2/21/2007.
Download File - 29.9 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Is America Ready for a Woman President?
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Mar 30, 2007
A woman is now the Speaker of the House, placing her third in the line of succession, behind the vice president. Hillary Rodham Clinton says she is "in, and in to win" the 2008 presidential election. Is America ready for a woman in the Oval Office? How real is the possibility that a woman can win? In honor of Women's History Month, Democratic media advisor Celinda Lake, The White House Project's President Marie Wilson, Democratic campaign guru Joe Trippi, The Amoore Group's President, CEO Renee Amoore and Newsweek's Eleanor Clift will join us to help answer this timely question. Program recorded on 3/5/2007.
Download File - 349.3 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
The Supreme Court Revealed
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, Mar 29, 2007
Join Supreme Court experts Jeffrey Rosen and Jan Crawford Greenburg for a revealing Citizens' Constitutional Conversation about the nation's highest court. Rosen, the legal affairs editor of The New Republic, is the author of The Supreme Court: The Personalities and Rivalries that Defined America. He discusses how personality and style mold decision making within the U.S. Supreme Court, almost as much as precedent and constitutional philosophy. Greenburg, author of the new book Supreme Conflict, is also an ABC News correspondent. She will take us inside the Court to tell the back story of the Rehnquist and Roberts courts. Program recorded on 2/13/2007.
Download File - 33.0 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Washington: Devout or Deist?
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Mar 28, 2007
George Washington's religious beliefs have always intrigued Americans. Was he a devout Christian—or was he a deist? In a precursor to President's Day, the National Constitution Center presents a program exploring the question of Washington's religiosity with prominent scholars. Joining us will be Dr. Peter Lillback, author of George Washington's Sacred Fire, Dr. Peter Henriques, author of Realistic Visionary, Jana Novak, co-author of Washington's God, and moderator John DiIulio of the University of Pennsylvania. Program recorded on 2/6/2007.
Download File - 32.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
The Enemy at Home with Dinesh D'Souza
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, Mar 8, 2007
Dinesh D’Souza makes the case that the terrorism behind 9/11 and other tragedies was caused by "a decadent and depraved American culture that angers and repulses other societies," especially Muslims. Program recorded on 1/31/2007.
Download File - 32.0 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
The Washington Game: Who Has the Power?
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Mar 2, 2007
The fundamental function of checks and balances among the three branches of government may be the number one issue underlying debates in Washington ranging from the conduct of the war in Iraq to judicial appointments. Program recorded on 1/29/2007.
Download File - 34.6 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
The Other Battle
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Feb 16, 2007
Join two of our nation's most prominent constitutional law experts, Judge Richard Posner and Professor Geoffrey Stone, in a debate about the tension between civil liberties and national security when America is at war. Program recorded on 10/10/2006.
Download File - 33.6 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
American Girl Week: Author Valerie Tripp
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Jan 17, 2007
Tripp discusses her books, how American history informs her characters, and how girls play an important role in history. Program recorded on 12/27/2006.
Download File - 20.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Philadelphia Talks: Crime, Guns and Murder
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, Jan 2, 2007
It is an issue that certainly will dominate next year's race for mayor: the challenge to make our City safe for its citizens and as an economic priority for growing the City's vital tourism business. Program recorded on 12/4/2006.
Download File - 35.8 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Inside Look at the White House Response to 9/11
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Dec 22, 2006
Former presidential adviser John Yoo, author of War by Other Means: An Insider's Account on the War on Terror, for a look at the Bush administration's response to the 9/11 tragedy. Professor Kermit Roosevelt, Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, moderates. Program recorded on 11/14/2006.
Download File - 29.4 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Mann and Ornstein on Our Broken Congress
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Dec 18, 2006
Hear from two of the nation's most respected scholars of government and politics, who have just collaborated on a new book about what's wrong with the Congress, The Broken Branch. Program recorded on 12/05/2006.
Download File - 33.8 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
John McCain Town Hall Meeting
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, Dec 7, 2006
As he forms an exploratory committee to run for President in 2008, Arizona Senator John McCain joins Michael Smerconish in a town hall meeting with WPHT 1210 AM The Big Talker and the National Constitution Center. Program recorded on 12/02/2006.
Download File - 31.9 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
2008 Presidential Campaign Forecast
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Dec 4, 2006
Join master Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg and expert Republican strategist Ed Rollins, moderated by journalist Margaret Carlson on the 2008 race. Program recorded on 11/16/2006.
Download File - 31.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Presidential Afterlives
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Nov 24, 2006
Four journalists and experts in the presidency come together to examine the presidents who found new purpose after leaving office, as well as those who slipped quietly into private life. Featuring authors Mark Updegrove and Patricia O'Toole, as well as journalists Jennifer Senior and Todd S. Purdum. Program recorded on 10/3/2006.
Download File - 28.0 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
The Way to Win
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, Nov 16, 2006
Can the Democrats retake the White House? And, how can the Republicans defend that critical political real estate? With Mark Halperin of ABC News and The Washington Post's John Harris. Program recorded on 10/9/2006.
Download File - 30.0 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Nov 13, 2006
New Yorker writer Lawrence Wright discusses the riveting story behind the al-Qaeda attacks against America. This program coincides with the Center's newest exhibit, 9/11: A Nation Remembers. Program recorded on 9/8/2006.
Download File - 20.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Behind the Closed Doors of the 9/11 Commission
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Sep 08, 2006
Two chairmen of the 9/11 Commission,
Tom Kean and Lee Hamilton, Go Behind the Closed Doors of the 9/11 Commission with the New Yorker's Lawrence Wright. With Wright moderating,
Kean and Hamilton tell the compelling story of the al-Qaeda attacks against America
and the politically charged, historically significant bipartisan commission that investigated
the events of September 11th. This program coincides with the Center's newest exhibit, 9/11: A Nation Remembers. Program recorded on 9/8/2006.
Download File - 31.4 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Sports Talk with WPEN
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, Aug 03, 2006
Hosted by WPEN's Jody McDonald and Don Tollefson, this conversation will examine the changing landscape of sports in the United States, the impact of women and minorities in sports over the past 50+ years, as well as the athlete's role in our society. Joining McDonald and Tollefson will be a group of professional athletes, coaches, and writers from the Philadelphia area including John Chaney (Former Temple Men's Basketball Coach), Ed Pinckney (Former Villanova Men's Basketball player and current Asst. Coach), Phil Jasner (Philadelphia Daily News Sports Writer), and Denise Dillon (Drexel Women's Basketball Head Coach). Program recorded on 7/29/2006.
Download File - 36.0 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
76ers President Billy King
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, Aug 03, 2006
Jackie Robinson left an indelible imprint on history when he emerged from the Brooklyn Dodgers dugout in 1947, becoming the first black player to break Major League Baseball's color barrier. Years later, basketball great Bill Russell left a similar mark when he led the Boston Celtics to an NBA championship as the first black coach of a major professional sports team in the United States. Today, minorities continue to break barriers in the world of sports and achieve success at the highest levels, both on the field and in the boardroom. The National Constitution Center presents "From the Negro Leagues to the Front Office" with Philadelphia 76ers President Billy King, moderated by CBS 3's Beasley Reece. This program is held in conjunction with the Center's summer exhibit, Sports: Breaking Records, Breaking Barriers. Program recorded on 8/03/2006.
Download File - 27.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Babe Ruth: The Big Bam
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Author: National Constitution Center Fri, Jul 28, 2006
He was the Sultan of Swat. The Caliph of Clout. The Wizard of Whack. The Bambino. And simply, to his teammates, the Big Bam. Join a conversation with Leigh Montville, the award-winning author of the New York Times bestseller Ted Williams, who now gives us the true story of the Breaking Records poster boy in The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe Ruth. Program recorded on 7/27/2006.
Download File - 23.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Breaking Barriers: Gay in the NFL
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Jun 28, 2006
As a member of the NFL for nine years, Esera Tuaolo played for five major teams, including the Green Bay Packers, Jacksonville Jaguars, Carolina Panthers, Atlanta Falcons, and Minnesota Vikings. In 1999, he went to the Superbowl with the Atlanta Falcons. In 2002, he retired from football and publicly announced that he was gay. Program recorded on 6/28/2006.
Download File - 8.9 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
JFK and Civil Rights
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Jun 19, 2006
Nick Bryant, the BBC's South Asia correspondent based in New Delhi, India, discusses his new book, The Bystander: John F. Kennedy and the Struggle for Black Equality. In this tough look at John F. Kennedy, Bryant makes the case that the former President squandered his opportunity to advance the civil rights movement. The Bystander reveals new first source research including the Kennedy "civil rights plank" of his 1946 campaign for Congress, newly released tapes from the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Massachusetts African-American leaders who have remained silent until now. Program recorded on 6/19/2006.
Download File - 11.6 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Philly Talks: 2007 Mayor's Race
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, Jun 15, 2006
Discussion focuses on the upcoming 2007 Mayoral campaign and the men and women who will vie for one of the toughest jobs in Pennsylvania. Chris Mottola, an accomplished consultant for Republican candidates across the nation, and Neil Oxman, one of the leading national consultants on the Democratic side, discusses the wide field of candidates for Mayor. Philadelphia Magazine editor Larry Platt moderates. Program recorded on 6/15/06.
Download File - 11.0 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
American Gospel with Newsweek's Jon Meacham
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Jun 14, 2006
In his new book, AMERICAN GOSPEL: God, the Founding Fathers and the Making of a Nation, Newsweek Managing Editor and New York Times best-selling author Jon Meacham studies the history of religion in American public life. Program recorded on 6/14/06.
Download File - 10.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
David Brooks
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Jun 12, 2006
The New York Times' columnist David Brooks, one of the most prominent voices in conservative politics in America today, discusses the challenges facing the current Bush Administration, the upcoming 2006 elections, and the 2008 Presidential race. Program recorded on 6/12/06.
Download File - 11.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Politics of Sports
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Jun 7, 2006
Politics of Sport: From Berlin to Beijing explores the marriage between sports and politics. Jeremy Schaap, acclaimed ESPN reporter and host of Outside the Lines, joins Dr. Susan Bachrach, historian at the National Holocaust Museum, and columnists and sports commentators Dave Zirin and Stan Hochman. This program is held in conjunction with the Center's summer exhibit, Sports: Breaking Records, Breaking Barriers. Program recorded on 6/7/06.
Download File - 12.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Richard Brookhiser
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Jun 5, 2006
Acclaimed author and historian, Richard Brookhiser answers modern day questions through the voices of America's past in his new book, What Would the Founders Do? Our Questions, Their Answers. Brookhiser uses historical, social and intellectual context to theorize what the founders would think of today's most controversial and important issues. Program recorded on 6/5/06.
Download File - 11.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Gordon Wood: Revolutionary Characters
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, May 31, 2006
Historian Gordon Wood discusses his new book, Revolutionary Characters: What Made the Founders Different?, in which he explores the iconoclastic side of some of the most prominent founding fathers. Wood's Revolutionary Characters offers a series of revealing studies of the men who came to be known as the founding fathers - George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Adams, Thomas Paine, and Aaron Burr. Wood is professor of history at Brown University. He is one of the foremost scholars on the American Revolution in the country. Program recorded on 5/31/06.
Download File - 15.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Eminent Domain Post-Kelo
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Apr 10, 2006
Kelo v. New London, a case from the 2004-2005 Supreme Court term, has caused continuing controversy surrounding the government's use of eminent domain powers and is the subject of the Fourth Annual John M. Templeton, Jr., Lecture on Economic Liberties and the Constitution. Speakers include Scott Bullock, Thomas Merrill, and Douglas W. Kmiec, with an introduction by Richard Stengel and John M. Templeton, Jr. Program recorded on 4/10/06. Questions or comments? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 13.6 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, Mar 7, 2006
Explore the continually shifting gray areas in American civil rights with Kenji Yoshino, an openly gay, Asian American Yale Law Professor and author of Covering: A Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights. Program recorded on 3/7/06. Questions or comments? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 17.1 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
The Constitution and Domestic Spying
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Feb 13, 2006
Richard Stengel, President and CEO of the National Constitution Center, reads his open editorial on the constitutional struggle between executive war powers and civil liberties, which originally appeared in the Philadelphia Inquirer in January, 2006. Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 3.0 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Barney Frank
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Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Jan 30, 2006
Thirteen-term United States Congressman Barney Frank from Massachusetts, is a prominent, provocative figure in the Democratic Party. Frank is outspoken on many human rights issues. Frank shares his constitutional expertise on issues such as the evolving Supreme Court, Congressional ethics issues and gay marriage. Program recorded on 2/22/06.
Download File - 11.9 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Justice Stephen Breyer
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Jan 18, 2006
Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court Stephen Breyer visits the National Constitution Center to discuss his book, Active Liberty: Interpreting our Democratic Constitution. Based on the Tanner lectures on Human Values that Justice Breyer delivered at Harvard University in November 2004, Active Liberty explores the Constitution as a guide for applying fundamental American principles to a changing society. Justice Breyer is a member of the Distinguished Scholars Panel at the National Constitution Center. Program recorded on 1/18/06. Questions or comments? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 21.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Briefing on Judge Alito
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Author: National Constitution Center Thu, Jan 12, 2006
The University of Pennsylvania Law School and the National Constitution Center join together in an examination of Judge Samuel L. Alito's nomination to become Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, succeeding Sandra Day O'Connor. The event includes discussion of substantive Supreme Court doctrine and the potential impact of Judge Alito's appointment on the development of constitutional law. The discussion includes: Thomas Gentile, an Alito clerk in 1996-97 and a partner in the New Jersey law firm of Lampf, Lipkin, Prupis and Petigrow; David Rudovsky, Senior Fellow at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and a veteran civil rights attorney; Theodore Ruger, Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and a former law clerk to Justice Stephen A. Breyer. Recorded on 1/12/2006. Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 12.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Franklin Biographers: A Reunion
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Author: National Constitution Center Sun, Jan 8, 2006
Franklin biographers Walter Isaacson, Gordon Wood, Stacy Schiff, with Jim Lehrer and Rick Beeman. Recorded on 1/8/2006. Questions or comments/ Write programs@constitutioncenter.org.
Download File - 23.3 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Dover Intelligent Design Case
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, Dec 20, 2005
Randall Wenger, an intelligent design advocate and Jeremy Gunn, Director of the ACLU's Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief debate the Dover, PA intelligent design case. Recorded on 10/19/2005. Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 31.5 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
John Bogle: 'The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism'
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Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Nov 09, 2005
John Bogle is a zealous advocate for the small investor. He tells the story of why we lost our way and of how we can right our course. Bogle argues for investor's interests rather than in the interests of corporate and financial managers. Recorded on 11/09/2005. Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 17.6 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Richard Clarke: 'The Scorpion's Gate'
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Author: National Constitution Center Tue, Nov 08, 2005
Richard Clarke, adviser to four Presidents on national security and terrorism, talks about his new non-fiction book, The Scorpion's Gate, a geopolitical thriller. Clarke also talks about the latest developments in Iraq, terrorism and our homeland security. Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 34.7 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Doris Kearns Goodwin: 'Team of Rivals'
programs@constitutioncenter.org
Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Nov 02, 2005
Acclaimed historian Doris Kearns Goodwin talks about her new book, Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln. Goodwin illuminates Lincoln's political genius as the one-term congressman/prairie lawyer who rises from obscurity to prevail over three gifted rivals of national reputation to become President. Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 18.1 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Amar: 'The Constitution: A Biography'
programs@constitutioncenter.org
Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Sep 19, 2005
Yale Law Professor and National Constitution Center scholar Akhil Reed Amar nationally launches his book, which tells the life story of the Constitution. Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 29.1 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Cornel West: 'Democracy Matters'
programs@constitutioncenter.org
Author: National Constitution Center Mon, Sep 19, 2005
The prominent Princeton professor discusses his premise that American democracy is in danger. Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 35.0 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Donna Brazile: 'Cooking with Grease'
Author: National Constitution Centerprograms@constitutioncenter.org Wed, Jun 22, 2005
Brazile discusses her book and her experiences in politics, which range from organizing voter registration drives in the parishes of her native Louisiana to managing Al Gore's 2000 Presidential campaign. Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 18.2 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Pat Buchanan: 'How the Right Went Wrong'
programs@constitutioncenter.org
Author: National Constitution Center Tue, Nov 30, 2004
Pat Buchanan, former Director of Communications for the Reagan White House and presidential candidate, appears at the National Constitution Center for a discussion of his new book, "How the Right Went Wrong". Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 22.3 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
Joe Scarborough: 'Rome Wasn't Burnt in a Day'
programs@constitutioncenter.org
Author: National Constitution Center Wed, Sep 22, 2004
Joe Scarborough, former Republican congressman from Florida (1994-2001) and current host of MSNBC's Scarborough Country, discussed his new book, Rome Wasn't Burnt in a Day with Edward Turzanski, National Security and Intelligence Analyst at LaSalle University. Scarborough provides insights into what is really happening inside Washington today, and offers solutions he asserts will appeal to all intelligent readers - be they conservatives, liberals, libertarians, or "folks just plain fed up with all the labels." Comments or questions? Write programs@constitutioncenter.org
Download File - 21.8 MB Listen To This Podcast (Streaming Audio)
- Published:
2002
- LearnOutLoud.com Product ID:
C016902

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