The 1787 Project
The 1787 Project
Justin Dyer
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.
The Meaning of Sex in Federal Law
In our final episode for the course, we conclude our section on Equal Protection by considering ongoing legal and political debates about the meaning "sex" in federal anti-discrimination statutes including the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
May 6, 2021
10 min
A Quasi-Suspect Classification
This episode explores how the Supreme Court has addressed sex-based discrimination claims in Equal Protection analysis.
May 5, 2021
15 min
Gratz and Grutter
This episode gives a brief overview of the 2003 cases of Gratz v. Bollinger and Grutter v. Bollinger, the first major Supreme Court cases about the use of race in university admissions since the 1968 Bakke case.
Apr 29, 2021
8 min
Equal Protection in University Admissions
This episode takes a close look at the case of University of California v. Bakke (1978), which sets the general analytic framework for the Supreme Court's subsequent series of cases on the use of race as a factor in university admissions decisions.
Apr 27, 2021
28 min
Civil Rights and State Action
In the Civil Rights Act of 1875, Congress sought to prevent discrimination in public accommodations on the basis of race, but the Supreme Court declared that to be beyond the scope of Congress' power under Section V of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Apr 22, 2021
11 min
Separate But Equal
Turning now to the Equal Protection Clause, we consider in this episode the background that lead to the case of Plessy v. Ferguson (1896) and the way the Supreme Court addressed that precedent in Brown v. Board of Education (1954).
Apr 20, 2021
15 min
RFRA and the Contraception Mandate
In this episode, we go back to the case of Burwell v. Hobby Lobby in 2014 to consider the structure of some of the arguments about the application of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act in specific cases.
Apr 16, 2021
13 min
Religious Freedom Restored
This episode gives an overview of the back-and-forth between the Supreme Court and Congress over the issue of religious free exercise that led to the passage of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) in 1993 and the Supreme Court's limiting of the application of RFRA only to federal law in the case of City of Boerne v. Flores (1997).
Apr 13, 2021
12 min
Religious Exemptions w/ Prof. Phillip Munoz
In this conversation with Notre Dame Professor Phillip Munoz, we talk about the Free Exercise Clause and the contested place of religious exemptions in U.S. constitutional law and politics.
Apr 8, 2021
40 min
Free Exercise and the Rule of Law
This episode explores several early cases about the Free Exercise Clause and the question of whether the First Amendment requires religious exemptions to otherwise valid laws. After considering the issue of polygamy in the federal territories in the nineteenth century, we then look at the important case of Sherbert v. Verner (1963) and preview our discussion, in the next episode, about the Supreme Court's move away from the reasoning in Sherbert in the 1990s.
Apr 6, 2021
12 min
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