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Skidmore College

Notre Dame's Zuckert to give Constitution Day talk

September 16, 2012
Zuckert

Michael Zuckert

Skidmore will celebrate Constitution Day 2012 with a lecture by Notre Dame scholar Michael Zuckert at 5 p.m. Monday, Sept. 24. 

Zuckert, the Nancy R. Dreux Professor of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame, will give a talk titled "Completing the Constitution: The 14th Amendment," in the Payne Room of the Tang Teaching Museum. Admission is free and open to all.

Ratified in 1868, the 14 th Amendment defines national citizenship, due process, and equal protection aspects of the constitution.The amendment is sometimes held to have revolutionized the Constitution, in effect replacing the traditional federal system with a more national system. It is also argued that the amendment essentially reaffirmed the pre-war Constitution.

The truth appears to lie with neither side: the drafters of the amendment attempted to "complete the Constitution, " neither to reform it radically, nor to reaffirm it simply. In doing so, they unwittingly followed in the tracks of the original "father of the Constitution," James Madison, who believed the original Constitution to be defective in important ways. Proper attention to the context and the structure of the text of the amendment reveals just how the amendment was to "complete the Constitution."

Zuckert is a specialist in the fields of political theory and Constitutional studies.
He has published extensively on a variety of topics, including George Orwell, Plato, Shakespeare, and contemporary liberal theory. He is currently finishing a book calledCompleting the Constitution: The Post-Civil War Amendmentsand is co-writing another book on Machiavelli and Shakespeare. In addition, he has been commissioned to write the volume on John Rawls for a series on 20 th-century political philosophy. He co-authored and co-produced public radio seriesMr. Adams and Mr. Jefferson: A Nine-Part Drama for the Radio.He also was senior scholar for Liberty! (1997), a six hour public television series on the American Revolution, and served as senior advisor on the PBS series on Benjamin Franklin (2002) and Alexander Hamilton (2007). He is currently head of the new Tocqueville Center for the Study of Religion in American Public Life at Notre Dame.

Zuckert has received grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Woodrow Wilson Center, Earhart Foundation and the National Science Foundation.

Skidmore's Department of Government is sponsoring the lecture.

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