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Sewall, Gilbert T. – Academic Questions, 2012
Howard Zinn's "A People's History of the United States" is the nation's best-known work of American history. It is also the nation's best-selling survey of American history, having sold two million copies since its publication in 1980 and still selling about 125,000 paperback copies yearly. The fifth and current edition covers America up…
Descriptors: United States History, Historians, History Instruction, History
Iannone, Carol – Academic Questions, 2012
This article presents an interview with Robert George, who holds Princeton's celebrated McCormick Chair in Jurisprudence and is the founding director of the James Madison Program. George has served on the President's Council on Bioethics and as a presidential appointee to the United States Commission on Civil Rights. He is also a member of the…
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, United States History, Civil Rights, Interviews
Radosh, Ronald – Academic Questions, 2010
The International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C.--a private museum that opened in July 2002 at the cost of $40 million--is rated as one of the most visited and popular tourist destinations in the nation's capital, despite stiff competition from the various public museums that are part of the Smithsonian. The popularity of the Spy Museum has a…
Descriptors: United States History, Popular Culture, War, Museums
Belz, Herman – Academic Questions, 2012
The part played by Sally Hemings in the life of Thomas Jefferson has been regarded as provocatively dubious since political enemy James Callender claimed in 1802 that Jefferson was the father of several of Hemings's children. Historian Merrill Peterson, observing that paternity is hard to prove, wrote in 1960 that no concrete evidence was ever…
Descriptors: Evidence, African Americans, Literary Genres, Historians
Brann, Eva – Academic Questions, 2012
Is not America the West's very West, from the East Coast across the continent, "Western" even in its latest, pervasive piety--diversity? For diversity-preachment, in spite of all its excesses, is a recognition that this continent hosts--except for a tiny remnant of "Native" Americans--an immigrant population, who themselves, or through their…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Moral Development, Governance, Nationalism
Lindsay, Thomas K. – Academic Questions, 2012
The question of the relation between liberal education and political liberty, perennially important, is driven for this forum by the Obama administration's endorsement of "A Crucible Moment: College Learning & Democracy's Future," according to which the chief ends of postsecondary civic education ought to include the promotion of sweeping…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Educational History, Politics of Education, Educational Policy
Bork, Robert H. – Academic Questions, 2011
The latest episode in the long-running struggle for control of the Constitution, and the political power that goes with it, is playing out in the federal courts in California. The contending philosophies are originalism, which holds that the Constitution should be read as it was originally understood by the framers and ratifiers, and the congeries…
Descriptors: Democracy, Federal Courts, Political Power, College Faculty
Schaub, Diana – Academic Questions, 2012
A "civic recession" is as worrisome as an economic recession. "A Crucible Moment: College Learning & Democracy's Future" (The National Task Force on Civic Learning and Democratic Engagement, 2012) should be praised for acknowledging the peril and seeking to rebuild the "depleted civic capital." Welcome, too, is the report's conviction that…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Civics, Democracy, Citizenship
Johnson, K. C. – Academic Questions, 2012
In this article, the author talks about the report "A Crucible Moment: College Learning & Democracy's Future," which provides a blueprint of what higher education ought "not" to do. The document was produced by the Association of American Colleges & Universities (AAC&U), an organization with a long history not only of demanding the advancement of…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Democracy, Citizenship, Democratic Values
Maranto, Robert; Woessner, Matthew C. – Academic Questions, 2012
In this article, the authors talk about the relevance of American political science and America. Political science has enormous strengths in its highly talented practitioners and sophisticated methods. However, its disconnection from its host society, while not so severe as for fields like English and sociology, nonetheless poses an existential…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Political Science, Relevance (Education), Educational Opportunities
Bunting, Josiah, III – Academic Questions, 2008
Interest in military history is as strong as it has ever been--except on American college campuses. Lt. Gen. Josiah Bunting III examines why today's undergraduates need to study the facts of war, and why knowing its causes and consequences remain a vital part of our common knowledge.
Descriptors: War, United States History, Undergraduate Study, Military Service
Avery, Sheldon – Academic Questions, 2009
The federal Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended, defines a "historically" black institution of higher education as "any historically black college or university that was established prior to 1964, whose principle mission was, and is, the education of black Americans." They are usually referred to as HBCUs. Most private…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Black Colleges, African American Institutions, War
Moyar, Mark – Academic Questions, 2008
Although the Vietnam War ended more than thirty years ago, historians remain as divided on what happened as the American people were during the war. Mark Moyar maps the ongoing battle between "orthodox" and "revisionist" Vietnam War historians: the first group, those who depict Vietnam as a bad war that the United States should…
Descriptors: Asian History, War, Foreign Countries, Historians
Connerly, Ward – Academic Questions, 2008
In his keynote address at "Race and Gender Preferences at the Crossroads," a January 2008 conference organized by the California Association of Scholars, Ward Connerly confidently asserts that the era of explicit race preferences will soon be "deader than a doornail." However, it is up to those who remember (in the words of John F. Kennedy) that…
Descriptors: Racial Differences, Civil Rights, Selective Admission, Student Diversity
Bateman, Robert L. – Academic Questions, 2008
America has always felt ambivalent towards its armed forces. During national emergencies it has shown them support, but during longer eras of calm this has often turned to distrust and scorn. LTC Robert Bateman examines the underpinnings of this uneasy and complex relationship, which has been mirrored and expressed most intensely (sometimes in…
Descriptors: Campuses, Armed Forces, Military Personnel, Military Schools
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