On April 10, 2013, William Rand Kenan, Jr., Professor of American History, Pauline Maier of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, delivered the Georgetown Law Center’s thirty-third Annual Philip A. Hart Memorial Lecture: The Strange History of the Bill of Rights. Pauline Maier was the William Rand Kenan, Jr., Professor of American History at MIT. She went to Radcliffe College (Class of 1960), spent a year as a Fulbright scholar at the London School of Economics, and received her Ph.D. in History from Harvard in 1968. She was on the faculty of the University of Massachusetts, Boston, and the University of Wisconsin, Madison, where she was the Robinson-Edwards Professor of History, before going to MIT in 1978. She has served on the boards ...
Tomiko Brown-Nagin, the Justice Thurgood Marshall Distinguished Professor of Law and Professor of Hi...
These brief comments were presented in May 2014 at a panel in honor of the late Professor Pauline Ma...
Rights are a sacred part of American identity, yet they are the source of some of our greatest divis...
The rights extended to people who reside in the United States and whether or not those people are co...
Streaming video requires RealPlayer to view.The University Archives has determined that this item is...
Almost a century after American colonists secured their freedom from England, internal conflict surr...
JAMES JONES LECTURE SERIES: LIZ BORGWARDT The Atlantic Charter and the Genesis of the Modern Human R...
The Ohio State University Mershon Center for International Security StudiesRebecca J. Scott is the C...
This conference has its own historical memories, its own historical predecessor and its own historic...
As American voters consider electing the nation’s first female commander in chief, New York Law Scho...
Flier announcing a lecture presented September 10, 1997, by Linda K. Kerber, Professor of History, U...
The story of the Framing of the Fourteenth Amendment is a lost story of American history, covered ov...
On March 31, 2011, Professor of Law, Michael Klarman of Harvard Law School delivered the Georgetown ...
Lecture by Chief Judge John J. Gibbons of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (1987-1990...
Eric Foner is DeWitt Clinton Professor of History at Columbia University. Born in New York City to a...
Tomiko Brown-Nagin, the Justice Thurgood Marshall Distinguished Professor of Law and Professor of Hi...
These brief comments were presented in May 2014 at a panel in honor of the late Professor Pauline Ma...
Rights are a sacred part of American identity, yet they are the source of some of our greatest divis...
The rights extended to people who reside in the United States and whether or not those people are co...
Streaming video requires RealPlayer to view.The University Archives has determined that this item is...
Almost a century after American colonists secured their freedom from England, internal conflict surr...
JAMES JONES LECTURE SERIES: LIZ BORGWARDT The Atlantic Charter and the Genesis of the Modern Human R...
The Ohio State University Mershon Center for International Security StudiesRebecca J. Scott is the C...
This conference has its own historical memories, its own historical predecessor and its own historic...
As American voters consider electing the nation’s first female commander in chief, New York Law Scho...
Flier announcing a lecture presented September 10, 1997, by Linda K. Kerber, Professor of History, U...
The story of the Framing of the Fourteenth Amendment is a lost story of American history, covered ov...
On March 31, 2011, Professor of Law, Michael Klarman of Harvard Law School delivered the Georgetown ...
Lecture by Chief Judge John J. Gibbons of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (1987-1990...
Eric Foner is DeWitt Clinton Professor of History at Columbia University. Born in New York City to a...
Tomiko Brown-Nagin, the Justice Thurgood Marshall Distinguished Professor of Law and Professor of Hi...
These brief comments were presented in May 2014 at a panel in honor of the late Professor Pauline Ma...
Rights are a sacred part of American identity, yet they are the source of some of our greatest divis...