In this new podcast, Professor Amar offers weekly in-depth discussions on the most urgent and fascinating constitutional issues of our day. He is joined by host Andy Lipka and frequent guests: other top experts, including Bob Woodward, Neal Katyal, Nina Totenberg, Lawrence Lessig, Michael Gerhardt, and many more.

Season 3, Episode 34 (Show 138): This Must Be The Place

August 16, 2023

There are lots of Democrats in Washington DC.  Is that a reason for a judge to grant a motion from ex-president Trump to move the trial away?  Professor Amar has written on this subject, and shares his insights.  Hint: Trump won’t like it.

Ex-President Trump faces a number of trials, and he doesn’t like where some of them are.  Too many Democrats, or he doesn’t like the judge.  Does he have recourse?  No surprise – Professor Amar has written on this subject.  There is a fascinating history behind it, an originalism analysis, and, most importantly – an answer.  Changes of venue, bench trials, peremptory challenges, unanimous verdicts – they all find their way into this episode.

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Season 3, Episode 33 (Show 137): Third Time’s A Charm

August 9, 2023

A now-familiar defendant appears in federal court.  Should he appear in another type of tribunal?  Akhil raises the specter of a third impeachment, and all that it might imply.  This takes us to a constitutional place you have never heard before.

He’s baaack.  Former President Trump has been arraigned once again, this time on serious federal charges related to the very heart of democracy – the election itself.  Special Counsel Jack Smith continues to discharge his appointed function by bringing charges he deems warranted.  Beyond Smith, however, do the American people have other means of redress?  And if Trump is guilty, will these prosecutions prevent him from seeking and possibly gaining the White House?  Akhil has some surprising ideas – and one that even surprises himself!

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Season 3, Episode 32 (Show 136): The Legacy of the Harvard Case – Special Guest Jeffrey Brenzel

August 2, 2023

The shock waves from the affirmative action opinion continue to propagate, and former admissions Dean Jeffrey Brenzel joins us with a look at legacy and donor admissions and other policies implicated by these developments.

We return to the affirmative action case, and again former Yale Dean of Undergraduate Admissions, Jeffrey Brenzel, joins us with his peerless expertise.  The fallout of the opinion is enormous ,and we address some of its ramifications, including legacy admissions, donor admissions, private vs. public institutional options, admissions departments’ responses, and much more.  What about the new frontiers of litigation that seem to be emerging, from scholarships designed to address racial disparities to non-race-conscious policies that nevertheless have impact on racial makeup?  Former Dean Brenzel also offers a fascinating critique of the likely responses, showing how what might seem like a powerful response might actually be a foolish way to avoid real impact.

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Season 3, Episode 31 (Show 135): Amara Culpa, Amara Bene

July 26, 2023

Professor Amar looks at his own words, both on this podcast and elsewhere; his mistakes and his wisdom each teach us something.

What’s in a name?  This week, our podcast title means (sort of) “Amar was wrong – Amar was right.”  Two weeks ago we said “bigots” and many made much of that.  So we take the feedback seriously and revisit it – you can judge the result.  Meanwhile, news from Long Island brings the 4th amendment to the fore again, and in a somewhat different way.  Different – how?  Listen and find out how to create a better jurisprudence without amending the Constitution, and the real differences in the lives of the people this would make.  Finally, Akhil has a new article in the popular press, and we introduce that for later elaboration.

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Season 3, Episode 30 (Show 134): Scrutinizing Affirmative Action – Special Guest Jeffrey Brenzel

July 19, 2023

Affirmative action takes the stage as the Court strikes down, in essence, the framework it had reluctantly and fitfully constructed over the past 50 years.  We bring an expert on board to help us help you decipher it – Jeff Brenzel, former Dean of Undergraduate Admissions at Yale.

It’s time to discuss the Affirmative Action cases from Harvard and the University of North Carolina, and we have brought in an expert on college admissions – Jeff Brenzel, the former Dean of Undergraduate Admissions at Yale.  Jeff is so much more than that – he has taught at Yale as a lecturer in philosophy and humanities; is the former head of the Alumni Association, and is a current trustee at Morehouse College, to name some of his many hats.  He offers a perspective that is a perfect supplement to the legal analysis from Professor Amar, as we make our way through 237 pages of Supreme Court opinion, concurrences, and fiery dissents, not to mention Akhil’s scholarship on this subject over the decades.  It’s potentially a morass and we begin to find our way through it, to hopefully understand the stormy present and the uncertain future of college admissions.

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Season 3, Episode 29 (Show 133): The Rights of Bigots

July 12, 2023

When a website designer claims the right to turn away a gay couple who requests a wedding website, Colorado takes umbrage, the Supreme Court weights in, and we analyze.

A Colorado website designer refuses to create sites for gay couples’ weddings, going afoul of Colorado’s public accommodations law.  Can she be compelled to author such a site?  The Court has ruled, and we have the analysis.  Along the way, we find ourselves discussing the intricacies of stipulations, and getting into the fine points of how one gets to federal court, even as we consider more mainstream questions as speech vs. conduct, the limits of rights, and some interesting hypotheticals.  Professor Amar, as usual, has his own take on such things.

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