Podcast appearances and mentions of Dick Howard

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Best podcasts about Dick Howard

Latest podcast episodes about Dick Howard

UVA Law
Retiring Faculty A. E. Dick Howard and Richard Bonnie Honored

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2024 36:35


Retiring professors Richard Bonnie '69 and A. E. Dick Howard '61 reflect on their careers, following introductions by Dean Risa Goluboff during Law Alumni Weekend. (University of Virginia School of Law, May 11, 2024)

UVA Law
A Fireside Chat With A. E. Dick Howard '61

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2024 60:13


The Virginia Law Review hosts UVA Law professors A. E. Dick Howard '61 and Charles Barzun '05 for a fireside chat detailing Howard's career. (University of Virginia School of Law, March 21, 2024)

Project Zion Podcast
573 | Cuppa Joe | Israel A. Smith

Project Zion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2023 51:41


How does one lead a church out of a riotous and tumultuous time following the end of a second World War and the financial struggles such a war leaves in its wake? From rebellious teenager of a religious leader to President and Prophet of the Restoration at the age of seventy, Israel A. Smith steps into the role at just such a time. But, say what you will about Israel's limited theological prowess, his pastoral way of leadership provided some much-needed stability. Join Lach Mackay, Tony Chavala-Smith and Karin Peter for a brief but fascinating look at the Israel A. Smith era in the church.    Further reading on Israel A. Smith: Norma Hiles, Gentle Monarch Paul Edwards, Our Legacy of Faith Dick Howard, The Church Through the Years (vol. 1)Dick Howard, The Church Through the Years (vol. 2)Mark Scherer, Journey of a People (Two-volume set)Also mentioned: Fawn Brodie, No Man Knows My History Sharing in Community of ChristDownload TranscriptThanks for listening to Project Zion Podcast!Follow us on Facebook and Instagram!

Project Zion Podcast
546 | Percolating on Faith | Sexuality and Faith

Project Zion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2023 67:48


What better time than Valentine's Day to talk about sex? In this repost of a Percolating on Faith episode, which originally aired in October of 2016, Carla speaks with Tony and Charmaine about sexuality, how we as a church are moving from a rule-based culture to one of principle-based responsible choices, how we have come a long way dealing with issues of sexuality and gender, and where we still need to improve.Recommended reading for additional info on some of these topics: Song of Solomon or the Song of Songs (Hebrew Bible/Old Testament)The Church Through the Years, 2 Volume set by Dick Howard (cf. Chapter 35)Women's Reality by Anne Wilson SchaefShe Who Is by Elizabeth JohnsonDownload TranscriptThanks for listening to Project Zion Podcast!Follow us on Facebook and Instagram!

The GJBeat
Dick Howard!! #grandfatherofmountainbiking #lawnornaments

The GJBeat

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2023 177:27


Dick Howard and I had never met and this was the best of connections.  He is considered to be the Grandfather of Mountain Biking in Virginia.  Why that self proclaimed title?  You'll find out not just about Dick's passion for cycling but his stories of bartending in Richmond, celebrity encounters, education and everything in between.   Saddle up and get ready to take a ride with the Grandfather!

A Little More Conversation with Ben O’Hara-Byrne
Did our bail system fail an OPP constable killed in the line of duty, What was it like to be scored on by Pele & How recent winter storms reveal gaps in our emergency preparedness

A Little More Conversation with Ben O’Hara-Byrne

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2022 50:44


Did our bail system fail an OPP constable killed in the line of duty?   Guest: Mark Baxter, president of the Police Association of Ontario What was it like to be scored on by Pele? Dick Howard pays tribute to the Brazilian soccer legend   Guest: Dick Howard, former professional soccer goalie, author, and longtime broadcaster How recent winter storms reveal gaps in our emergency preparedness  Guest: Jean Slick, Program Head and Associate Professor, Disaster and Emergency Management graduate programs, Royal Roads University 

A Little More Conversation with Ben O’Hara-Byrne
What was it like to be scored on by Pele? Dick Howard pays tribute to the Brazilian soccer legend

A Little More Conversation with Ben O’Hara-Byrne

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2022 18:50


Guest: Dick Howard, former professional soccer goalie, author, and longtime broadcaster

Cases and Controversies
Nothing Comes Close: The Historic Supreme Court Term

Cases and Controversies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2022 18:20


From shifts in the law to public reaction to its rulings, the US Supreme Court's just-concluded term appears to be a blockbuster like no other. Since the Warren Court of the 1950s and 1960s, “I don't think we've seen any term that comes close to the one we just saw,” said A.E. Dick Howard, a constitutional law professor at the University of Virginia and a former clerk to Justice Hugo Black. During the term that wrapped up June 30, the court overturned the 1973 landmark ruling in Roe v. Wade and broadened the reach of the Second Amendment for the first time in over a decade. The justices also continued to establish a robust right to religious freedom at the expense of other priorities, and set up severe limits on the so-called administrative state. Howard Cases and Controversies hosts Kimberly Robinson and Lydia Wheeler to put in prospective how the term fits with the court's more than 230-year history. Do you have feedback on this episode of Cases & Controversies? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.

Roy Green Show
Univ of Virginia law professor Dick Howard. Controversy over U.S. Supreme Court.

Roy Green Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2022 16:10


Roy Green Show
Has SCOTUS definitively decided to overturn Roe v Wade? Prof. Dick Howard.

Roy Green Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2022 16:21


See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Virginia Historical Society Podcasts
The Constitution of Virginia: Defining the Political Community

Virginia Historical Society Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2021 67:06


On October 7, 2021 A. E. Dick Howard held a discussion about the evolution of Virginia's Constitution from 1776 to the present day. Virginia's Declaration of Rights (1776) declares all men to be “equally free and independent.” But, as to the suffrage, the Declaration speaks in more qualified terms; there must be “sufficient evidence of permanent common interest with, and attachment to, the community.” In the years since 1776, successive revisions of Virginia's Constitution reflect sharp debate over how we should define the political community. Who belongs? Who doesn't? In the nineteenth century, the idea of community became more inclusive—universal white male suffrage by 1851 and, during Reconstruction, inclusion of African Americans. In 1902, however, Virginians adopted a constitution that, steeped in notions of white supremacy, disenfranchised most black voters. In l971, Virginia renounced that racially tainted era with the adoption of a new constitution. What brought about that change? What work remains to be done? A. E. Dick Howard is the Warner-Booker Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Virginia. He was Executive Director of the Commission on Constitutional Revision, served as counsel to the General Assembly when it received and acted on the commission's recommendations, and directed the successful referendum campaign for the Constitution's ratification. His books include the two-volume Commentaries on the Constitution of Virginia and The Road to Runnymede: Magna Carta and Constitutionalism in America. The content and opinions expressed in these presentations are solely those of the speaker and not necessarily of the Virginia Museum of History & Culture.

Bold Dominion
43 BONUS - Full interview with Prof. A. E. Dick Howard

Bold Dominion

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 90:09


Episode Notes For Episode 43 ("Where did Virginia's state constitution come from?"), producer Katherine Hansen talked at length with UVA Law professor A.E. Dick Howard, who wrote the current Virginia constitution. For the full civics experience, we're offering that full interview here as a bonus episode this week.

Désautels le dimanche
Anniversaire du 11 septembre, et géopolitique en Afghanistan

Désautels le dimanche

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2021 106:33


Un reportage du11septembre, New York d'hier à aujourd'hui, avec Michel Labrecque; entrevue sur le11septembre2001 avec Chris Alexander; reportage sur les20ans de progrès menacés pour les femmes Afghanes, avec Manon Globensky; entrevue sur une nouvelle donne géopolitique en Afghanistan, avec Maxime Lefebvre; entrevue sur l'impact du11septembre sur les États-Unis avec Dick Howard; reportage sur l'avenir de la relance économique en région, avec Catherine Paradis; entrevue sur livre Le Yémen en guerre avec l'auteur Thomas Juneau; et entrevue sur l'hommage au compositeur grec Mikis Theodorakis avec Iraklis Galanakis.

Charlottesville Community Engagement
June 30, 2021: Route 250 reopens to traffic; Planning to extend Old Mills Trail along the Rivanna

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2021 16:06


In today’s Patreon-fueled shout-out: The Rivanna Conservation Alliance is looking for a few good volunteers to help out on Clean Stream Tuesdays, a mile and a half paddle and clean-up to remove trash and debris from popular stretches of the Rivanna River. Trash bags, trash pickers, gloves, and hand sanitizer/wipes will be provided, though volunteers will need to transport themselves to and from the end points. Kayaks for the purpose can be rented from the Rivanna River Company. Visit the Rivanna Conservation Alliance's volunteer page to learn more about upcoming dates.On today’s show:The Pantops CAC hears about development projects and an extension of the Old Mills TrailThe Metropolitan Planning Organization endorses planning projects Virginia’s Constitution turns 50 tomorrowAlbemarle and Charlottesville launch a Buy Local campaign We begin today with some transportation news. U.S. 250 in Nelson County between Route 6 and I-64. has reopened to traffic two months after being closed after a rock slide. According to a release, that’s two weeks ahead of schedule. Lou Hatter is a spokesman for the Virginia Department of Transportation’s Culpeper District. “We had two contractors who were really focused on getting this work done as quickly as possible,” Hatter said. “The fact that U.S. 250 was not open created real issues particularly for people lived on Route 6, Afton Mountain Road.”The contractors worked six days a week and removed over 700 dump trucks of material removed from the failed slope. “It was a steep slope so the work had to be done in stages because they had to go in with equipment and level out an area called a bench that the equipment could work from and then they would reach up above that to remove the loose material.”Hatter said a series of something called a “soil nail” have been drilled into the rock.“They’re secured in place with a cement grout and then over top of that is overlaid a chain link material like chain link fencing, a mesh material and that’s secured to the rods,” Hatter said. Over top of the soil nails is a layer of straw and grass seed intended to grow vegetation quickly. Hatter said the contractors also identified another area where a slope might have failed, and this same process has been applied at that location. Credit: Virginia Department of TransportationIn addition to being the first day of Fiscal Year 2021, July 1 is also the 50th anniversary of Virginia’s current constitution. The 1971 Constitution replaced a version from 1902 which historic records show was created to make it harder for Black Virginians to vote and to enshrine segregation as the law of the land. That constitution imposed a poll tax and literacy requirements to vote. The 1971 Constitution was an attempt to remove those restrictions following federal bans as well as passage of the Civil Rights Act. Copies of all four of Virginia’s Constitutions are on view at the Library of Virginia through Thursday. Learn more about the 1971 Constitution in a press release sent out by the office of Virginia Governor Ralph Northam.Governor Northam inspects previous Constitutions with legal scholar A. E. Dick Howard. Howard led the process to write the 1971 document. Albemarle County and Charlottesville have launched a joint Buy Local campaign to promote small businesses in the area. The economic development offices in both jurisdictions will run the campaign and are looking for businesses that might want to participate in what’s being described “as a multi-channel, multimedia promotional and educational campaign.” From the release:“Locally-owned, independent businesses with a brick-and-mortar facility in the City of Charlottesville or Albemarle County interested in being featured in the campaign should contact Jennifer Schmack at jschmack@albemarle.org (for Albemarle-based businesses) and Jason Ness at nessj@charlottesville.gov (for Charlottesville based-businesses).” Today is the official last day for Rebecca Carter as administrator of Buckingham County, according to the Farmville Herald. Carter moved to the county south of Albemarle in 1986 when her husband was transferred to a job with CSX. Soon after she went to work for Buckingham County as an administrative assistant. In 1994, she became administrator. Carter announced her resignation last December due to her husband’s failing health. Wayne Carter died in April, and Rebecca Carter told the Farmville Herald she plans to spend her retirement helping with the family farm. There’s an effort underway in Albemarle County to extend the Old Mills Trail along the Rivanna south of Pantops. That was one piece of information told to the Pantops Community Advisory Committee during their briefing on the Urban Rivanna River Corridor Plan, a joint planning effort intended to encourage greater collaboration between Albemarle and Charlottesville along a common border. Tim Padalino is a planner in Albemarle’s parks and recreation department.“There is an existing section of the Old Mills Trail as I think most viewers and attendees know,” Padalino said. “It’s approximately two and a half miles in length between Darden Towe Park on the upstream section and the I-64 bridges downstream, the current ending of the trail.”Padalino said the proposed extension would go further downstream to Milton through an area that is currently overgrown and wild. If turned into a trail, people might be able to walk to a spot that is also being planned for a better place to end a journey on the river itself. “So for example the vision for the Rivanna Greenway and Blueway includes future development of an expanded improved public landing and river access sport at Milton as well as some type of a new trailhead facility at Milton,” Padalino said. The extension will pass over land owned by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Padalino said a primitive pathway does exist, but it’s not sanctioned. The idea would be to use crushed stone as a trail bed rather than paving the four mile long, six foot wide trail. There’s also no funding yet for the extension. “It’s not officially maintained and it’s not permanently authorized for public use,” Padalino said. “Some easement acquisitions are still necessary before beginning final project design and funding request and grant applications and everything else that will come in the weeks and months ahead.” The extension to Milton will pass in some section close to the railroad, which will be owned soon by the Virginia Passenger Rail Authority. It will also pass by the Luckstone quarry. “And part of the arrangement and agreement between Luckstone and Albemarle County is to make sure that trail users can remain safe while passing through an active quarry,” Padalino said. Prepared by Albemarle County Parks & Recreation with support from Albemarle County Community Development – Geographic Data Services Division.Padalino made his comments at the Pantops Community Advisory Committee. That group also got updates on development projects under construction or under review. Senior planner Cameron Langille said contractors hired by the Virginia Department of Transportation continue to work on converting the junction of U.S. 250 and Interstate 64 into a “diverging diamond.”“As it stands that project is still on track to be completed at the original date of March 2023,” Langille said.Planners are reviewing a new 1,000 square foot building at the Pantops Shopping Center.“There’s a flat green grassed area there that they’re going to install some new parking into and then the new building is going to be a drive through car wash,” Langille said. Across U.S. 250, the façade of the former Battlefield/Malloy Ford has been demolished. Malloy moved to U.S. 29.“What they’re doing is to try to build the façade back because they’re looking to get some new auto dealerships to go back to that site,” Langille said. A site plan is nearing approval for The Hampton Inn to be built on State Farm Boulevard. A second hotel The Overlook is still in the review process for a rezoning application. “The applicant has told us that they want to continue going through reviews with staff until our comments have gotten to a point where the applicant feels comfortable moving forward to a public hearing with the Planning Commission,” Langille said. Langille said a proposal to build 130 apartment units on South Pantops Drive next to the Overlook Condominiums has been withdrawn. In its place is a new development for 40 townhomes. Two former fast food franchise buildings in the Pantops Shopping Center have closed in the past year. A Burger King remains vacant while the Hardees has a new tenant. “Tobey’s Pawn Shop has gone on in and occupied that space,” Langille said. “They just did some work inside of the building but really didn’t change anything else on site.”The Pantops Community Advisory Committee will next meet in August and will take off the month of July. Time for another subscriber-supported public service announcement! The Friends of the Jefferson-Madison Regional Library are having a Warehouse Sale at Albemarle Square Shopping Center (300 Albemarle Square) Friday, July 9 through Sunday, July 11 from 10-6 each day. There will be Fiction, Mysteries, SciFi and Fantasy, Cookbooks, Military, Biographies and YA and Children’s Books There will be a capacity limit of 80 shoppers. Proceeds benefit our regional public library system, JMRL, serving Charlottesville, Albemarle, Greene, Louisa and Nelson.*Finally today, time to go through some of the June 23 meeting of the Metropolitan Planning Organization Policy Board. To recap, that’s the federally-mandated body that approves transportation funding. It’s made up of two Charlottesville City Councilors, two Albemarle Supervisors, and the head of the Virginia Department of Transportation’s Culpeper District. The MPO adopted a resolution supporting an effort by the city of Charlottesville to seek additional funding to support the Meadow Creek Trail. Chris Gensic with the city’s Parks and Recreation Department said the city received a Transportation Alternatives grant of $300,000 two years ago for the project, which according to the staff report was for “the design and construction of a bike and pedestrian bridge across Meadow Creek as part of the U.S. 250 Commuter Trail from Hydraulic Road to Brandywine Drive.” That amount included $75,000 in local funding. However, that amount will not be enough to cover the project.“After doing some discussions with VDOT and thinking it through, we came up with a plan where A, you can’t just build a bridge that isn’t connected by a full multi-use path,” Genesis said. “There’s paths in that area but they are recreational dirt surface paths. In order to construct the entire project, to get all the funding in at once and hire one contractor and just get it all done, we’ve decided to apply for a second round of funding.” The request this year is for $500,000 and will require $135,000 in local funding as a match. A second city department is also making a Transportations Alternative Project grant request to fund the existing Safe Routes to School program for the next two fiscal years. More specifically, the funding would cover the cost of a full-time coordinator.“That coordinator helps to implement programs in the city schools, things like Bike and Walk to School day events, helmut giveaways, neighborhood bike repair,” said Amanda Poncy, the city’s bicycle and pedestrian coordinator. “Working with the city school division to better understand how kids are getting to school, and also building a website and social media presence.”The MPO approved resolutions of support for both, and a third for a planning grant for future of the Amtrak station on West Main Street. Jessica Hersh-Ballering is a transportation planner with the Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission. “This is a small station but it serves a lot of riders,” Hersh-Ballering said. “The size of the station doesn’t currently meet the needs of our numbers of boardings and alightings and with continued investment by the state into rail and passenger rail, it will continue to not meet those needs.”If funded, the TJPDC would create a master plan for the site. More on all three of those projects as 2021 continues. We’ll also hear more the rest of the year about the candidates for projects for consideration in the next round of VDOT’s Smart Scale process. The deadline isn’t until next year, but pre-selection work is underway. Potential projects for the MPO to consider are:A roundabout at the intersection of District Avenue and Hydraulic RoadAn extension of Hillsdale Avenue to the U.S. 250 bypassA bike and pedestrian crossing of the Rivanna River Multi-modal improvements for Avon Street between Mill Creek and Belmont Bridge Multi-modal improvements for 5th Street between Southwood and Harris RoadA grade-separated interchange, or “flyover” at U.S 250 and U.S. 29 Interested in more information in any of these stories? Take a look at the video. If you have any questions, let me know and I’ll try to help. That’s what I am here to do! A “flyover” interchange was suggested as a candidate by a member of the Citizens Transportation Advisory Committee This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

Live at America's Town Hall
Laboratories of Democracy: State Constitutions

Live at America's Town Hall

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2021 64:38


State constitutions influenced the drafting of the U.S. Constitution and continue to shape constitutional rights today. The Virginia Constitution of 1776 in particular influenced both the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights. As we get ready to celebrate Independence Day, National Constitution Center President and CEO Jeffrey Rosen joined experts for a two-part conversation on state constitutions. First, Rosen was joined by A.E. Dick Howard of the University of Virginia. Professor Howard is an expert on the Virginia Constitution of 1776 and Virginia's current constitution, which he helped draft and is commemorating its 50th anniversary this year. Rosen was then joined by two experts on state constitutions: Judge Jeffrey Sutton, author of 51 Imperfect Solutions: States and the Making of American Constitutional Law, and professor Emily Zackin, author of Looking for Rights in All the Wrong Places: Why State Constitutions Contain America's Positive Rights.  This panel was streamed live on June 28, 2021.  If you're interested in learning more about state constitutions, check out some of our past programs including this Town Hall program featuring Judge Jeffrey Sutton, “Why State Constitutions Matter.” Register for our 2021 Annual Supreme Court Review on July 8 at constitutioncenter.org/debate. Questions or comments about the show? Email us at podcast@constitutioncenter.org. Additional resources and transcript available at constitutioncenter.org/interactive-constitution/media-library.

university state rights register democracy independence constitution independence day town hall rosen laboratories state constitutions jeffrey rosen professor howard american constitutional law dick howard judge jeffrey sutton virginia constitution national constitution center president
With Good Reason
New Voices At The Table

With Good Reason

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 52:00


In 2016, Lashrecse Aird made history as the youngest woman ever elected to the Virginia House of Delegates. She says her unique perspective - shaped by a childhood of adversity and hardship - allows her to better serve the full range of experiences within her constituency. And: Ebony Guy was inspired to get involved in activism from a young age by her grandmother, a beloved civil rights leader in Halifax County, Virginia. Now a board member at Virginia Organizing - her activist work has centered on voter education and political campaigns. Plus: From 1997-2001, Paul Clinton Harris represented Albemarle County in the Virginia House of Delegates. A descendant of enslaved people at Monticello, he describes his unlikely path to political office - serving in the very seat that Thomas Jefferson once held many years ago. Later in the show: A.E. Dick Howard directed the commission that rewrote Virginia’s constitution, which was eventually enacted in 1971. It was a bipartisan effort intended to heal the wounds of the state’s racist past. 50 years later, he reflects on whether the new constitution went far enough.

Transition Virginia
Why are Virginia felons disenfranchised?

Transition Virginia

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2021 65:23


Virginia's legislature is considering a constitutional amendment that could make felon re-enfranchisement an automatic process. Episode guests are A.E. Dick Howard, a UVA professor and author of Virginia's 1971 Constitution, and Paul Levengood, Executive Director of The Marshall Foundation and former president of the VA Historical Society. They brief the Transition Team on why the Blue Ribbon Commission to update Virginia's 1901 Jim Crow constitution still included felon disenfranchisement and what the General Assembly should do about it now. See www.transitionva.com for more information.

UVA Law
The Constitution of Virginia at 50: Looking Back and Looking Ahead

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2021 120:39


UVA Law student Juliet Clark ’21, William & Mary law professor Rebecca Green and UVA Law professor Saikrishna Prakash analyze the history and future of the Virginia Constitution 50 years after its ratification. UVA Law professor A. E. Dick Howard ’61, who led the 1971 constitution revision effort, moderated the event. The event was part of the Baliles Legacy Series Presentation at the Virginia Bar Association’s annual meeting. (University of Virginia School of Law, Jan. 22, 2021)

Chenelle’s language learning journey podcast.
Clljp.ep.211. Dick Howard’s and Brian LOOSOONHUA of utalk.cOm

Chenelle’s language learning journey podcast.

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2021 81:33


Today on Chenelle‘s language learning journey podcast. I had the pleasure to speak with the founder of UTAlk.cOM dick Howard‘s and Brian LOOSOONHUA about HAL you TALK was first created in other language learning topics. I hope that you guys enjoy this episode if you would like to get 20% off any of the 144 languages from the UTALK site. you can put the promotional code UTALK/CHENELLE and you will get 20% off either a monthly, yearly or by yearly subscription. Please don’t forget to share, subscribe and review the podcast were podcast and download it. Thank you so much for your support. Happy new year everyone and happy language learning. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chenelle-patrice-hancock/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/chenelle-patrice-hancock/support

Les matins
Etats-Unis : combien d’Amériques se font face ? / les plans sociaux sont-ils une fatalité ?

Les matins

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2020 69:21


durée : 01:09:21 - Le Magazine du week-end - par : Antoine Dhulster - Joe Biden affrontera Donald Trump lors de l’élection présidentielle du 3 novembre. Quelles propositions, quelle offre politique portent les deux candidats ?/ Depuis des semaines, des plans sociaux se succèdent et font craindre une rentrée sociale cauchemardesque. L’Etat est-il à la hauteur ? - invités : Dick Howard philosophe, professeur émérite à la Stony Brook University à New York, membre, entre autres, du comité de rédaction de la revue Esprit. Auteur notamment de Aux origines de la pensée politique américaine ed. Hachette Pluriel, ou plus récemment Between Pol; Lauric Henneton maître de conférences à l'Université de VersaillesSaint Quentin-en-Yvelines; Nadine Levratto économiste, spécialiste des entreprises, directrice de recherche au CNRS.; Françoise Champeaux Juriste et journaliste; Julien Da Rolt délégué syndical CFDT du groupe AAA (Assistance Aéronautique et Aérospatiale, sous-traitant d’Airbus menacé par un plan social)

Premier Podcast
Dick Howard E104 @CPLPodcast (English)

Premier Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2020 72:55


Mike Miller's guest is Canadian soccer legend Dick Howard. @CPLPodcast #CANMNT

PremierPodcast
Premier Podcast E104: Dick Howard @CPLPodcast (English)

PremierPodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2020 72:55


New Premier Podcast: @MikeMillerFC's guest is Canadian soccer legend. @CPLPodcast #Canada #Soccer #FIFA #FIFAWC #United2026 #CANMNT The post Premier Podcast E104: Dick Howard @CPLPodcast (English) appeared first on NSXI Network.

Nice to meet you | The podcast
#18 Goede vrijdag 2020 | Vader vergeef!

Nice to meet you | The podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2020 12:23


In de nacht van 14 november 1940 werd door 55 Duitse bommenwerpers een allesvernietigende luchtaanval op de Engelse stad Coventry uitgevoerd. De schitterende Middeleeuwse kathedraal van Coventry werd door meerdere bommen verwoest. Er vielen 568 doden. Toen de toenmalige leider van de kathedraal Dick Howard de volgende morgen tussen de nagloeiende puinresten stond, pakte hij een krijtje en schreef…. Wat hij schreef en wat dat te maken heeft met Goede Vrijdag? Luister onze podcast. En bid mee! 

TV5MONDE - Kiosque
Macron en Chine / Présidentielle américaine / Roumanie / Mur de Berlin

TV5MONDE - Kiosque

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2019 54:00


Au sommaire : Emmanuel Macron en Chine Ce fut une courte et dense visite d'État en Chine pour le président français. Emmanuel Macron a décidé de jouer la carte européenne pour ce voyage, avec dans sa délégation une ministre allemande et un commissaire européen. L'union fait-elle la force face à Pékin ? Sur fond de guerre commerciale et géostratégique entre Pékin et Washington, quelle place pour l'UE en Chine ? Commerce, culture, environnement, mais quid des droits humains ? États-Unis, à un an de la présidentielle Une Amérique ultra-polarisée a lancé le compte à rebours : dans un an, les électeurs rééliront Donald Trump ou auront un nouveau président. La campagne promet-elle d'être particulièrement violente ? Pariant sur ses fidèles, Donald Trump surmontera-t-il l'enquête en vue de sa destitution ? Les Démocrates courent-ils le risque de voir occultés les débats de leur primaire ? Avec un nombre record de prétendants et aucun grand favori, quelle stratégie adopteront-ils face à un Donald Trump très offensif ? Roumanie Soulagement à Bruxelles... En Roumanie, le gouvernement du pro-européen de Ludovic Orban a obtenu de justesse la confiance du parlement. Le vote met fin à une crise politique qui empêchait le pays de désigner un candidat à la Commission européenne. Bruxelles est échaudé par les réformes controversées du précédent gouvernement social-démocrate. Comment le nouveau Premier ministre entend-il rétablir la confiance ? 30 ans de la chute du Mur de Berlin Que sont devenus les espoirs nés de l'abolition du Rideau de fer ? Il y a trente ans, la chute du Mur de Berlin symbolisait la fin d'un monde bipolaire dont allait découler un nouvel ordre mondial. Trente ans plus tard, vit-on la fin d'une ère ? Face aux inégalités croissantes, à la montée des populismes, au changement climatique, le libéralisme politique et économique a-t-il encore un avenir ? Invités : Pierre Haski, chroniqueur à France Inter, président de Reporters sans frontières ; Sylvie Matelly, directrice adjointe de l'Institut de relations internationales et stratégiques ; Alexandra Szacka, grand reporter à Radio-Canada, ancienne correspondante à Moscou ; Dick Howard, philosophe et politologue franco-américain ; Roxana Zamfirescu, journaliste à TVR (depuis Bucarest). Présentation : Silvia Garcia.

UVA Law
2019 Supreme Court Roundup

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2019 65:21


UVA Law professors A. E. Dick Howard, Richard Schragger and Vice Dean Leslie Kendrick, along with Brian Cannon, executive director at OneVirginia2021, discuss the last term’s most influential and important Supreme Court cases, and preview what’s ahead. The event was sponsored by the Student Legal Forum. (University of Virginia School of Law, Oct. 2, 2019)

Désautels le dimanche
Desautels le dimanche 2019.09.22

Désautels le dimanche

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2019 107:28


1re heure : L’écoanxiété est-elle en train de devenir le mal du siècle? – Reportage d’Akli Aït Abdallah; Les chefs d’État de la planète sont à New York pour parler climat – Étienne Leblanc, en direct de New York; Campagne électorale fédérale : ce que nous dit « l’affaire du blackface » – Entrevue avec Dick Howard, de l’Université Stony Brook dans l’État de New York; Une conservatrice-médiatrice en art inuit au Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal – Entrevue avec l’ethnologue inuk Lisa Qiluqqi Koperqualuk. 2e heure : Campagne électorale : le Canada d’aujourd’hui vu par un scientifique – Entrevue avec Claude Villeneuve, professeur à l’UQAC; Tunisie : la difficile acceptation de l’homosexualité – Reportage de Janic Tremblay Livre : Lâchez pas, les gars! D’anciens cancres témoignent – Entrevue avec François Cardinal, directeur de la publication.

Your Weekly Constitutional
Constitutional Migration

Your Weekly Constitutional

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2019 52:59


Birds migrate. So do monarch butterflies. And so do constitutions. So says A.E. "Dick" Howard, the White Burkett Miller Professor of Law and Public Affairs at the University of Virginia. And he should know--over the past fifty years, whenever constitutional ideas migrated from the United States to other countries, Dick Howard seemed to be there.

TV5MONDE - Kiosque
Notre-Dame de Paris / Situation politique en Algérie / Rapport Mueller

TV5MONDE - Kiosque

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2019 54:12


Au sommaire : Notre-Dame De quoi Notre-Dame de Paris est-elle le symbole ? En quelques minutes, lundi 15 avril au soir, le choc suscité par l'incendie de la cathédrale parisienne s'est mué en vague planétaire. Pourquoi cette émotion mondialisée ? Que représente la cathédrale sur le plan culturel, historique et religieux ? Les braises encore fumantes que se posait déjà la question de la reconstruction. La somme faramineuse du milliard d'euros de promesses de dons a été atteinte en 48 heures. Que penser de ce flot d'argent ? L'incendie a bouleversé le calendrier politique du président Macron qui devait livrer le jour même ses conclusions après le « grand débat national ». Les mesures présidentielles fuitent. Sont-elles à la hauteur de la crise des « gilets jaunes » ? Algérie En Algérie, mardi 16 avril, les manifestations se sont poursuivies, le président du Conseil constitutionnel a démissionné et le général Ahmed Gaïd Salah a prononcé un discours très attendu sur la situation politique. L'homme fort du pays a désavoué le recours par la police à la répression des manifestants et a promis de protéger les citoyens. D'où sont venus les ordres pour utiliser la manière forte ? Le succès du mouvement dépend-il de sa capacité à résister à la tentation de la violence ? Le chef de l'armée a de nouveau condamné les complots que seraient en train de tramer certains partis. Mais cette fois-ci, Ahmed Gaïd Salah a accusé nommément le général Toufik. Quel rôle joue l'ancien chef des services de renseignement ? Et après près de deux mois de contestation, quelle solution politique ? Rapport Mueller Informations sensibles, confidentielles, compromettantes... Le rapport final sur l'enquête russe a été publié jeudi 18 avril dans une version expurgée de toute une série de détails. Cela risque-t-il de laisser l'opinion publique américaine sur sa faim ? Le ministre de la justice William Barr peut-il vouloir dissimuler les éléments embarrassants pour le président Trump ? Invités : Jean-Christophe Ploquin, rédacteur en chef de « La Croix » ; Ana Navarro Pedro, correspondante à Paris de l'hebdomadaire généraliste portugais « Visao » ; Akram Belkaïd, journaliste au « Monde diplomatique », auteur de « L'Algérie en 100 questions, un pays empêché » (éditions Tallandier) ; Dick Howard, philosophe, politologue franco-américain, auteur de « Les Ombres de l'Amérique. De Kennedy à Trump » (éditions François Bourin) ; Jean-Sébastien Sauvé, historien de l'architecture (depuis Montréal). Présentation : Silvia Garcia.

UVA Law
Reforming Redistricting: Commissions, Litigation & Gerrymandering

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2019 68:20


A panel of activists, academics and litigators discussed various approaches to redistricting reform, with a particular focus on the current efforts in Virginia to set up a less-partisan redistricting commission. The panel featured Brian Cannon, executive director at OneVirginia2021; Henry Chambers ’91, professor at the University of Richmond School of Law; Mark Gaber, director of trial litigation at the Campaign Legal Center; and Rebecca Green, professor at William & Mary Law School. The panel was moderated by UVA Law professor A. E. Dick Howard ’61. The event was part of the symposium “Elections: Where Law & Politics Intersect,” hosted by UVA Law’s Journal of Law & Politics. (University of Virginia School of Law, March 5, 2019)

Art Dealer Diaries Podcast
Pottery Dealer Charles King discusses Pueblo Pottery and his life story Ep. 32 interview with Dr.Mark Sublette

Art Dealer Diaries Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2019 58:45


Native American Art dealer Charles King shares his life story of growing up in a pottery dealer's household and his love for Pueblo pottery. Including discussions about Tony Da, Maria Martinez pottery, and Richard Spivey Maria Martinez biographer.

Plus on est de fous, plus on lit!
Mercredi 10 octobre 2018 Plus on est de fous, plus on lit!

Plus on est de fous, plus on lit!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2018 105:56


Ça nous intéresse avec Thomas Leblanc; polémique autour de la BD pour adulte Petit Paul de Bastien Vivès. Entrevue avec Dick Howard pour Les ombres de l’Amérique. Jessica Barker et Alexandre Gascon ont lu Small Animals: Parenthood in the Age of Fear, de Kim Brooks. Philippe-Vincent Foisy a lu pour nous l’essai Right Here, Right Now: Politics and Leadership in the Age of Disruption, de Stephen Harper. Mon 1er roman; Marie Darsigny avec Trente, éditions Remue-ménage. Analyse de textes de chansons avec Sara Hébert et Brendan Kelly; Alaclair Ensemble, Joe Strummer et Angèle.

UVA Law
Supreme Court Roundup Podcast

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2018 62:52


Professors A. E. Dick Howard, Anne Coughlin, Daniel Ortiz and Micah Schwartzman discuss key cases from the 2017 U.S. Supreme Court term, and look ahead to the coming year.

supreme court daniel ortiz dick howard micah schwartzman anne coughlin
Désautels le dimanche
Desautels le dimanche 2018.08.05

Désautels le dimanche

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2018 106:34


1re heure : Sur la route des élections (1) - Reportage de Janic Tremblay dans Verchères ; Obama à la rescousse des démocrates - Entrevue de Frank Desoer avec Dick Howard, professeur de philosophie politique à l’Université de Stony Brook à New-York ; Les géants aux pieds d’argile de Cavalia - Reportage de Marie-Laure Josselin ; Mai 68, la riposte de la droite - Entrevue de Frank Desoer avec Suzanne Marton-Guggenheim, militante gaulliste en Mai 68 et leader du Tea Party. 2e heure : Sur la route des élections (2) - Reportage de Janic Tremblay dans Richelieu ; L’avortement dans le monde - Entrevue de Frank Desoer avec la codirectrice du Planning Familial en France, Véronique Séhier ; Melbourne, une capitale l’été - Entrevue de Frank Desoer avec la journaliste indépendante Laurence Arthur ; Rachel Therrien, trompettiste sans frontières - Reportage de Michel Labrecque.

UVA Law
Constitutional Moments With A. E. Dick Howard

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2018 58:48


To mark his appointment to the Warner-Booker Distinguished Professor of International Law chair, professor A. E. Dick Howard gives a lecture describing lessons he has drawn from his personal experiences in the realm of constitutional law. He recounts his role in the drafting and adoption of the Virginia Constitution, his time comparing notes with constitution-makers in post-communist Central and Eastern Europe, and his observations on marking the 800th anniversary of the Magna Carta. (University of Virginia School of Law, March 23, 2018)

The Adamantium Podcast
E009 Dick Howard

The Adamantium Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2018 62:13


Former Canadian national goalkeeper and soccer analyst Dick Howard joins us on this episode of The Adamantium Podcast. We discuss how he transitioned from a career as a player/coach to broadcast, how soccer has changed in Canada since he moved here in the 60s, and the influence Toronto FC has on the nation's future. We also talk about meeting legendary manager Sir Alex Ferguson, being chased off Wembley field, his experience covering World Cups, his favourites going into the 2018 World Cup and how he feels about the English National Team.

UVA Law
2017 Supreme Court Roundup

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2017 71:35


Professors A. E. Dick Howard, Barbara Armacost, Michael Gilbert and Micah Schwartzman discuss key cases from the recent U.S. Supreme Court term, and look ahead to the coming year. (University of Virginia School of Law, Sept. 13, 2017)

Désautels le dimanche
Desautels le dimanche 2017.08.20

Désautels le dimanche

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2017 106:27


1ère heure : Le premier ministre du Québec, Philippe Couillard, au micro de Geneviève Asselin, réagit aux manifestations pro et anti-immigration prévues aujourd'hui; Petit rappel des principes de la liberté d'expression - Une entrevue de Geneviève Asselin avec Sébastien Gramont, professeur de droit à l'Université d'Ottawa; La Corée du Sud, entre tradition et postmodernité -Reportage de Michel Labrecque; La crise des opioïdes au Canada : le point de vue de l'AMC - une entrevue de Geneviève Asselin avec le Dr Laurent Marcoux, président de l'Association médicale canadienne; 2ième heure : Controverses à répétition : la présidence de Trump approcherait-elle de sa fin? - Une entrevue de Geneviève Asselin avec Dick Howard, professeur émérite de philosophie politique américaine de l’Université d’état Stony Brook, de New York. Dick Howard est également l’auteur de Aux origines de la pensée politique américaine paru en 2008 aux Éditions Hachette; Quand les néo-nazis américains relèvent la tête - Chronique inter

L’invité des Carnets du monde
Donald Trump invité à la télévision américaine : "ça devient un show"

L’invité des Carnets du monde

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2016 5:00


Dick Howard, écrivain, philosophe, politologue américain et membre du comité de réaction de la "Revue Esprit" était l'invité des Carnets du monde.

Project Zion Podcast
PZP - E36 - Dick Howard - Emeritus Church Historian.mp3

Project Zion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2016 81:13


The John Oakley Show
Dick Howard - Former Canadian International Goalkeeper - July 11, 2016

The John Oakley Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2016 11:32


Dick Howard joins the Oakley Show and breaks down the Euro Cup.

UVA Law
The 2014 Term and What's Next for the Supreme Court

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2015 15:47


UVA law professor A. E. Dick Howard discusses the past Supreme Court term, how the Roberts Court is shaping up, and what's coming this term. (University of Virginia School of Law, Sept. 24, 2015)

UVA Law
2015 Supreme Court Roundup at UVA Law

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2015 70:00


Professors A. E. Dick Howard, Kerry Abrams, Frederick Schauer and Risa Goluboff discuss key cases from the recent U.S. Supreme Court term, and look ahead to the coming year. (University of Virginia School of Law, Sept. 24, 2015)

Virginia Historical Society Podcasts
Magna Carta: 800 Years since Runnymede by A. E. Dick Howard

Virginia Historical Society Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2015 61:54


On September 9 at noon, A. E. Dick Howard will deliver a Banner Lecture entitled "Magna Carta: 800 Years since Runnymede." A. E. Dick HowardIn 2015 people on both sides of the Atlantic will mark the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta. On June 15, 1215, at Runnymede, a reluctant King John agreed to the barons' terms in a document which came to be known as Magna Carta. Though the king never meant to keep his promises, Magna Carta survived. Down through the centuries, it has been a symbol of opposition to arbitrary government. Magna Carta came to America with the English colonies' first charters. In the years leading up to the Revolution, Americans framed their arguments against British policies by drawing upon the language of the early charters and upon Magna Carta as their birthright. Having declared independence, Americans turned to writing and implementing state constitutions and, ultimately, a Federal Constitution. Magna Carta left an indelible mark on these developments. At the core of this legacy is the rule of law—the thesis that no one, including those in government, is above the law. Another principle traceable to the Great Charter is constitutional supremacy—the idea of a superstatute against which ordinary laws are to be measured. Constitutional provisions guaranteeing due process of law derive directly from Magna Carta's assurance of proceedings according to the "law of the land." And the uses successive generations, in England and America, have made of the Charter have given us the idea of an organic, evolving Constitution, one that can be adapted to the needs and challenges of our own time. A. E. Dick Howard is the White Burkett Miller Professor of Law and Public Affairs at the University of Virginia. A Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University, he was a law clerk to Justice Hugo L. Black of the Supreme Court of the United States. A member of High Table at Christ Church, Oxford, Professor Howard has written extensively on constitutional law and history, including The Road from Runnymede: Magna Carta and Constitutionalism in America. Recently the University of Virginia conferred on him its Thomas Jefferson Award—the highest honor the University accords a member of the faculty

Virginia Historical Society Podcasts
Magna Carta: 800 Years since Runnymede

Virginia Historical Society Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2015 61:54


On September 9, 2015, A. E. Dick Howard will deliver a Banner Lecture entitled "Magna Carta: 800 Years since Runnymede." A. E. Dick HowardIn 2015 people on both sides of the Atlantic will mark the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta. On June 15, 1215, at Runnymede, a reluctant King John agreed to the barons' terms in a document which came to be known as Magna Carta. Though the king never meant to keep his promises, Magna Carta survived. Down through the centuries, it has been a symbol of opposition to arbitrary government. Magna Carta came to America with the English colonies' first charters. In the years leading up to the Revolution, Americans framed their arguments against British policies by drawing upon the language of the early charters and upon Magna Carta as their birthright. Having declared independence, Americans turned to writing and implementing state constitutions and, ultimately, a Federal Constitution. Magna Carta left an indelible mark on these developments. At the core of this legacy is the rule of law—the thesis that no one, including those in government, is above the law. Another principle traceable to the Great Charter is constitutional supremacy—the idea of a superstatute against which ordinary laws are to be measured. Constitutional provisions guaranteeing due process of law derive directly from Magna Carta's assurance of proceedings according to the "law of the land." And the uses successive generations, in England and America, have made of the Charter have given us the idea of an organic, evolving Constitution, one that can be adapted to the needs and challenges of our own time. A. E. Dick Howard is the White Burkett Miller Professor of Law and Public Affairs at the University of Virginia. A Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University, he was a law clerk to Justice Hugo L. Black of the Supreme Court of the United States. A member of High Table at Christ Church, Oxford, Professor Howard has written extensively on constitutional law and history, including The Road from Runnymede: Magna Carta and Constitutionalism in America. Recently the University of Virginia conferred on him its Thomas Jefferson Award—the highest honor the University accords a member of the faculty. The content and opinions expressed in these presentations are solely those of the speaker and not necessarily of the Virginia Museum of History & Culture.

Your Weekly Constitutional
Magna Carta, Part II

Your Weekly Constitutional

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2015 54:01


Join us as we finish our fascinating discussion on Magna Carta with A.E. "Dick" Howard, one of the world's leading experts on the subject. Sorry - no Monty Python clips this week, but lots of other interesting stuff.

Your Weekly Constitutional
Magna Carta, Part I

Your Weekly Constitutional

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2015 54:04


A.E. "Dick" Howard is among the world's leading authorities on constitutional law and the Magna Carta. He's also articulate, informative and funny. And timely -- after all, the Magna Carta just turned 800 years old. So join us for a lively and wide-ranging conversation on this foundational constitutional document. It'll be 800 years before we can do this again.

UVA Law
"Magna Carta: 800 Years After Runnymede" with Professor A. E. Dick Howard

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2015 31:42


Professor A. E. Dick Howard speaks to UVA Law alumni on the importance of the Magna Carta to today's legal traditions during 2015 Alumni Weekend. (University of Virginia School of Law, May 9, 2015)

UVA Law
"Magna Carta: 800 Years After Runnymede," with A. E. Dick Howard and Tom McSweeney

UVA Law

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2015 47:01


UVA Law professor A. E. Dick Howard and William & Mary law professor Tom McSweeney discussed the impact of Magna Carta on both American and English law in honor of its 800th anniversary this year. The event, sponsored by the Federalist Society at UVA Law and the Student Legal Forum took place on March 25 at the University of Virginia School of Law.

Law and the Library
Magna Carta: Drafting Modern Constitutions

Law and the Library

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2015 29:26


Dec. 9, 2014. Scholars, historians and contemporary thinkers discuss how Magna Carta's political and legal traditions have carried into our current times at this symposium, Conversations on the Enduring Legacy of the Great Charter, held in conjunction with the Library's exhibition, "Magna Carta: Muse and Mentor." Speakers include A.E. Dick Howard, Cornelius Kerwin and David Fontana. For transcript, captions, and more information, visit http://www.loc.gov/today/cyberlc/feature_wdesc.php?rec=6613

Virginia Historical Society Podcasts
The Constitution of Virginia: From Jefferson's Day to Our Own Time

Virginia Historical Society Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2014 58:45


On September 8, 2011, A. E. Dick Howard delivered a Banner Lecture entitled "The Constitution of Virginia: From Jefferson's Day to Our Own Time." Commentators often refer to Professor A. E. Dick Howard as "The Father of Virginia's Constitution" for good reason. He was executive director of the commission that wrote Virginia's current constitution and directed the successful referendum campaign for ratification of that document. In this lecture, held during the 40th year since ratification, he will weave the story of Virginia's constitution with the great issues of our state's history—founding a republic, nurturing religious liberty, grappling with problems of race, facing the challenges of a changing society, and reflecting the hopes and aspirations of the people of Virginia. It is a story that has its great moments, such as Jefferson's Statute for Religious Freedom, and its sobering chapters, such as massive resistance. Ultimately, it is the story of how a people, though their constitution, shape their destiny. The author of numerous books, Professor Howard is the White Burkett Miller Professor of Law and Public Affairs at the University of Virginia.(Introduction by Paul Levengood) The content and opinions expressed in these presentations are solely those of the speaker and not necessarily of the Virginia Museum of History & Culture.

Virginia Historical Society Podcasts
The Constitution of Virginia: From Jefferson's Day to Our Own Time by A. E. Dick Howard

Virginia Historical Society Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2011 58:46


On September 8, 2011, A. E. Dick Howard delivered a Banner Lecture entitled "The Constitution of Virginia: From Jefferson's Day to Our Own Time." Commentators often refer to Professor A. E. Dick Howard as "The Father of Virginia's Constitution" for good reason. He was executive director of the commission that wrote Virginia’s current constitution and directed the successful referendum campaign for ratification of that document. In this lecture, held during the 40th year since ratification, he will weave the story of Virginia's constitution with the great issues of our state's history—founding a republic, nurturing religious liberty, grappling with problems of race, facing the challenges of a changing society, and reflecting the hopes and aspirations of the people of Virginia. It is a story that has its great moments, such as Jefferson's Statute for Religious Freedom, and its sobering chapters, such as massive resistance. Ultimately, it is the story of how a people, though their constitution, shape their destiny. The author of numerous books, Professor Howard is the White Burkett Miller Professor of Law and Public Affairs at the University of Virginia.(Introduction by Paul Levengood)

university father law news podcasts events constitution vhs public affairs commentators lectures religious freedom own time professor howard dick howard virginia history white burkett miller professor virginia historical society