The 1787 Project
Podcast tekijän mukaan Justin Dyer
60 Jaksot
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From Griswold to Roe
Julkaistiin: 18.2.2021 -
From West Coast Hotel to Griswold
Julkaistiin: 16.2.2021 -
Rise and Fall of (Economic) Substantive Due Process
Julkaistiin: 11.2.2021 -
Introducing Substantive Due Process
Julkaistiin: 9.2.2021 -
Selective Incorporation
Julkaistiin: 4.2.2021 -
Fundamental Rights and the Fourteenth Amendment
Julkaistiin: 2.2.2021 -
The Bill of Rights and the States
Julkaistiin: 28.1.2021 -
The Constitution Compromised
Julkaistiin: 26.1.2021 -
The Declaration and Constitution
Julkaistiin: 21.1.2021 -
Our Promissory Note
Julkaistiin: 19.1.2021 -
Faithless Electors and the Future of the Electoral College
Julkaistiin: 10.12.2020 -
Corporations, Money, and Speech
Julkaistiin: 9.12.2020 -
Why Partisan Gerrymandering is Constitutional
Julkaistiin: 3.12.2020 -
What Happened to the Voting Rights Act?
Julkaistiin: 1.12.2020 -
The Individual Mandate and the Commerce Clause
Julkaistiin: 19.11.2020 -
What Isn't Commerce?
Julkaistiin: 17.11.2020 -
What Does the Civil Rights Act Have to do with Commerce?
Julkaistiin: 12.11.2020 -
The Constitutional Revolution of 1937
Julkaistiin: 10.11.2020 -
Commerce, Manufacturing, and Labor
Julkaistiin: 5.11.2020 -
What is Commerce?
Julkaistiin: 3.11.2020
The 1787 Project is the podcast version of the lectures for Professor Justin Dyer's socially-distanced class on the U.S. Constitution at the University of Missouri. Running from August 2020 - May 2021, the course is about how the U.S. Constitution of 1787 frames the way we organize our life together as a political community. Published twice a week, the episodes explore who gets to decide big questions of public policy and why, analyze the design of our national political institutions and the contested boundaries between them, and look at the structure of constitutional rights.