Please join us in preparation for the celebration of the 225th Anniversary of the Constitution of the United States. More events to be announced later in the year!
Please join us in preparation for the celebration of the 225th Anniversary of the Constitution of the United States. More events to be announced later in the year!
Jack Miller Center for the Teaching of America’s Founding Principles and History
Position: Summer Fellow
Deadline for Application: March 1, 2012
Internship Dates: May 30- August 15, 2012
Location: Philadelphia, PA
The Jack Miller Center for Teaching America’s Founding Principles and History, a nonprofit, nonsectarian, nonpartisan, educational organization, strives to be the leading resource for educators seeking to strengthen the teaching of America’s founding principles and history. The JMC’s goal is to ensure that students receive the best possible education, one that prepares them to be good stewards of our nation’s freedoms and free institutions. The JMC headquarters are located in the Philadelphia suburb of Bala Cynwyd, Pa.
The Summer Fellow will assist in the planning and execution of summer programming at the JMC. Our Summer Institutes give professors and advanced graduate students an opportunity to come together for two intellectually stimulating weeks. Led by renowned scholars, institute fellows participate in seminars on selected topics in American History, political thought, economics, and literature; they also attend professional development workshops for developing engaging courses, the tenure process, book publishing and long-term career advancement.
The Summer Fellow will be expected to perform the following tasks:
- Manage event details to ensure the success of the summer programming.
- Assemble the Summer Institute Reader and other conference materials.
- Correspond with faculty members to arrange transportation.
- Attend weekly JMC staff meetings.
- Complete other office duties and/or projects related to the summer institutes, as needed.
Eligibility and Requirements:
- Able to perform detail-oriented work with accuracy.
- Exceptional organization skills.
- Strong communication skills, both oral and written.
- Proficiency in MS Excel.
- Strong academic record, interest in American history and politics. Undergraduate junior, senior, or recent graduate preferred.
- Ability to work independently and as part of a team.
Learning Objectives:
- Gain experience working in a national non-profit organization. Due to the small size of our office, the fellow will have the opportunity to learn about various aspects of the organization, including development and programming.
- Gain experience in event-planning.
- Deepen understanding of America’s founding principles by attending morning sessions of the summer institutes and networking with scholars.
Internship Details:
- May 30-August 15, 2012.
- Full-time position. Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm.
- Must be able to attend all JMC summer events (dates pending). All expenses for these events will be covered by the JMC.
- $5,000 stipend.
Application Process:
To apply, please email a cover letter and copy of your resume by March 1, 2012 to:
Sam Bellows
Program Officer, Jack Miller Center
(484) 436-2060 (ext. 2070)
After March 1, phone interviews will be scheduled with the finalists for the position. The summer fellow will be selected on or before April 1.
Enhancing Public-Private Partnerships
and Coordination
Christopher Newport University’s Center for American Studies, the Greater Hampton Roads Chapter of the National Defense Industrial Association, and Continuity First are proud to present the 2nd annual Symposium on Homeland Security: Enhancing Public-Private Partnerships and Coordination, to be hosted on the CNU campus July 19-20, 2012.
The Symposium will include:
Increasingly complex threats to the United States require innovative, cross-disciplinary responses from local, state, and federal government entities. Private sector firms continue to work hand in hand with government to produce new technology, develop groundbreaking practices, and shape products and services to robustly address today’s evolving threat environment. Natural disasters, man-made incidents, and acts of cyberterrorism and cyberespionage underscore that strong partnerships and coordination are more needed now than ever before in American history.
Confirmed Keynote Speakers:
Other Confirmed Speakers Include:
Panel Sessions:
Panel 1: Financial Sector Resilience and Public/Private Sector Collaboration
Panel 2: Navigating the Governmental Budget Crunch: What is the Future of Private Sector Support in Homeland Security and Emergency Management?
Panel 3: Public-Private Sector Information Sharing
Panel 4: Defending a Virtual World: Cyber Crime, Cyber Terrorism, and Cyber Espionage
Panel 5: Public-Private Sector Collaboration in Disaster Recovery
Panel 6: Technology and Protection in America’s Points of Entry: Integrating Public/Private Capabilities
For a list of confirmed speakers, visit our website: symposiumonhomelandsecurity.com
We have sponsorships available and will also have an exhibit hall available for companies to market their products and services.
For more information, please contact Dr. Nathan E. Busch, Co-Director of the Center for American Studies, at 757-594-8498 or nbusch@cnu.edu.
The Jack Miller Center is proud to announce the addition of Harold J. Krent to the Steering Group of our growing Constitution Day Intiative.
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Harold J. KrentDean and Professor of Law |
Dean Krent graduated from Princeton University and received his law degree from New York University School of Law, where he served as notes editor of the Law Review and garnered several awards for excellence in writing.
Dean Krent clerked for the Honorable William H. Timbers of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and then worked in the Department of Justice for the Appellate Staff of the Civil Division, writing briefs and arguing cases in various courts of appeals across the nation. He has been teaching full-time since 1987 and has focused his scholarship on legal aspects of individuals’ interaction with the government. His 2005 book, Presidential Powers, is a comprehensive examination of the president’s role as defined by the U.S. Constitution and judicial and historical precedents.
In addition, Dean Krent has served as a consultant to the Administrative Conference of the United States. He has also litigated numerous cases with students on behalf of indigent prisoners.
Monday, January 09, 2012
9:30 AM to 11:30 AM
Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map
The Brookings Institution, October 10, 2011
The Brookings Institution, March 02, 2011
The Brookings Institution, March 16, 2010
View All »
After the program, panelists will take audience questions.
Chairman, Civic Education Initiative
Assistant Editorial Features Editor, The Wall Street Journal
CEO & President
Civic Enterprises, LLC
Founder and Superintendent
Democracy Prep Public Schools
Director, CIRCLE
Research Director, Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service, Tufts University
President
Jack Miller Center
The Jack Miller Center is pleased to announce that one of our Faculty members and Program Director of the Ryan Center at Villanova University, Dr. Colleen Sheehan, has been confirmed by the Pennsylvania State Senate as a member of the State Board of Education. She was nominated by Governor Tom Corbett. Please join us in offering Dr. Sheehan our sincere congratulations.
Read more about Professor Sheehan HERE
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Humane Studies Fellowships are awarded to graduate students and outstanding undergraduates embarking on liberty-advancing careers in ideas. The fellowships support study in a variety of fields, including economics, philosophy, law, political science, history, and sociology.

Awards range from $2,000 to $15,000 and fellowship winners may re-apply for each year of their studies. In 2011, the Institute for Humane Studies awarded more than $750,000 to 195 students. Application Deadline December 31.
The program is open to full-time and prospective graduate students, including law and MBA students. There are a limited number of fellowships open to undergraduate juniors and seniors with a demonstrated interest in pursuing a scholarly career.
Past fellows have researched historical and contemporary ideas on freedom of action and association and the rule of law.
Review the research interests of the past fellows.
Some notable research interests include:
Exceptional candidates with an evident intention of advancing liberty through other intellectual activities, such as teaching, policy analysis, and law, will also be considered.
Fellows join a network of more than 1,400 scholars and students, including David Schmidtz at the University of Arizona, Tyler Cowen at George Mason University, and Randall Kroszner at the University of Chicago. Many fellows credit the program with providing additional support beyond the financial award:
“The Humane Studies Fellowship put me in touch with a community of people who have, throughout the years, given me good advice and encouragement.” Tom Bell, Professor of Law, Chapman University School of Law (listen to interview)
Montesquieu Forum Lecture
Professor Joshua Parens
Professor of Philosophy, University of Dallas
“Why Read Alfarabi in the 21st Century?”
Monday, October 17, 2011
4:00 PM
Roosevelt University
Sullivan Room (2nd floor)
430 South Michigan Avenue
Chicago, IL 60605
For further information contact Professor Stuart Warner at 312-218-5955
The Yale Center for the Study of Representative Institutions is an interdisciplinary pilot program, established, with the support of the Jack Miller Center, for the purpose of developing the study of the theory and practice of representative government in the Anglo-American tradition. It is jointly hosted by the Departments of History and Political Science and co-directed by Professors Steven Smith (Political Science) and Keith Wrightson (History). Danilo Petranovich (Ph.D., Political Science) is the Jack Miller Center Lecturer.
There is a long tradition of studies of this nature at Yale University. The Center for Parliamentary History (1966-2007) edited and published the proceedings of 17th-century English parliaments. The source materials collected at the Center remain available to scholars and students. Yale’s Libraries: the Sterling Memorial Library, the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the Lewis Walpole Library and the Law Library have very extensive holdings of direct relevance to the field.
The long-term mission of the program is to revitalize and extend the study of the theory and practice of modern constitutionalism in the Anglo-American tradition. These fields have been reduced in significance by shifts of concern and of methodology in both departments of history and of political science. Undergraduates exhibit an eagerness to engage with these matters, but it is inadequately catered for in contemporary academic programs. The aim of this program is to feed that healthy interest by re-examining the intersection of ideas, institutions, and political practice in the emergence of modern constitutional democracy, and thereby to further a political education that is both broadly conceived, and at the same time rigorous and critical.
We hope that the pilot program will stimulate a level of interest and support that might facilitate the establishment of a Center for the Study of Representative Government providing permanent institutional representation for this field of study, and that might include a base for visiting scholars working in this field, who would in turn contribute to an ongoing engagement with issues central to the health of our own political society.
About the Program
The last generation has seen a significant decline in the teaching of constitutional history in American universities. In particular, courses focused on the development of the theory and practice of constitutional government between the Founding and the Civil War have lost the central place which they once had in the historical curriculum. At the same time, the study of the constitutional history of early modern Britain, which once provided an essential prologue to the foundation of the American Republic, has become a rarity. This shift in academic concern constitutes a significant cultural loss. Students increasingly lack the opportunity to study, at a high level, the deep roots of their own political culture, and indeed the most powerful intellectual and institutional influences on the development of representative and democratic government worldwide.
The aim of this program is to reassert the centrality of these issues in the teaching of history and politics. Our goal is not simply to restore an older historical tradition, but rather to challenge and extend that tradition with new questions. These questions will focus on the origins, development and diffusion of a political culture that emerged in England during the Civil War and “Glorious Revolution,” was transmitted to America during the 17th and 18th centuries, transformed and extended by the American Revolution and tested in the American Civil War, fought in part to determine (in Abraham Lincoln’s phrase) whether a nation “conceived in liberty” and “dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal” could long endure.
We regard the political, intellectual, and constitutional developments which took place in Britain and America between the 17th and the mid-19th centuries as of singular and enduring importance. The founders of the American Republic knew themselves to have a deep legal and constitutional inheritance. The vocabulary and concepts used by the framers of the American Constitution have a direct link with those of the seventeenth-century English parliamentarians and legal and political theorists who defended the rule of law and the liberties of the subject and ultimately challenged and contained monarchical authority. The American Founders, however, did more than draw upon this inherited political culture. In the first Federalist Paper Alexander Hamilton wrote:
It has been frequently remarked that it seems to have been reserved to the people of this country, by their conduct and example, to decide the important question, whether societies of men are really capable or not of establishing good government from reflection and choice, or whether they are forever destined to depend for their political constitutions on accident and force.
The Federalist authors considered themselves as not just inheriting a tradition, but transforming it. A representative government based upon claims to certain inalienable rights and deriving its sovereignty from “we the people” created the possibility of the development of truly democratic government, and the transmission of the ideal (and eventual practice) of government “of the people, by the people, for the people” back to Europe and to a larger world gave the American experiment a central place in the political discourse of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
At the core of our program will thus be a series of questions: what was borrowed and what was left behind when the British inheritance was transplanted to the New World? What are the areas of continuity and discontinuity between the British and American legal and constitutional traditions? What did the American Founders mean in their claim to establish a “new order of the ages” (novus ordo seclorum)? What were some of the original rationales for the idea of representative government as well as for a written constitution? What were the philosophical, constitutional, political, and social foundations of toleration, especially religious toleration, in Anglo-American law? What tensions existed between constitutional government as conceived by those who shaped the British Revolutions of the seventeenth century, or the American Founding which extended that tradition, and the emergence of mass democracy in the 19th century? Did Abraham Lincoln help to restore the American republic to its original foundations or did he inaugurate a new kind of democratic experiment that is still reverberating in politics and law? What does British democracy, and the post-colonial constitutions modeled upon it in former British possessions owe to the influence of the American democratic example? What influence have both had on the political institutions of the contemporary world, and how successfully have their ideals and practices been adapted to differing cultural contexts? Can their claims to universality be sustained?
These are just some – by no means all – of the types of question we hope to explore in this new program. Our purpose is not to supply pat answers to such questions but to encourage the serious study of how these ideas, and the institutions to which they gave rise were developed in their time, and how their influence has extended over time. This is an exciting story in itself. It is the more exciting because it remains an unfinished story. What is the future of constitutional government and representative democracy as it faces the challenge of a new century? Can ideas and institutions developed to handle problems peculiar to their historical time still apply in a very different world?
The program involves:
Taken as a whole these elements of the program are intended to encourage research, advance the careers of young scholars, provide teaching, and extend the public discussion of the key issues. In sum they will create a forum for the study of representative institutions in historical context.

An Invitation for Proposals
Proposal Guidelines
Also see Program Description for further information. click here
In 2004, Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia, troubled by numerous studies indicating a growing constitutional illiteracy among Americans, introduced an amendment to that year’s omnibus spending bill, mandating that every institution of higher education receiving federal funds must hold educational programming on or about September 17 of every year, in honor of the promulgation of the U.S. Constitution in 1787.
The Jack Miller Center wants to make Senator Byrd’s admirable vision a more vibrant reality, and to that end, we have established our Constitution Day Initiative. The Center invites proposals from JMC Fellows and outside scholars who seek funding support for intellectually robust and visible Constitution Day events on college campuses. The Jack Miller Center will provide awards of up to $2,000 in support of Constitution Day programming. As part of our Initiative, the JMC will announce a theme each year, and will urge, though not require, applicants to incorporate this theme in their events. Proposals focusing on other themes will be considered, especially those that resonate with contemporary constitutional questions. This year’s theme is:
The Limits of Federal Government Action in Domestic Affairs under the Constitution
Recent political and legal controversies have raised great interest in the question of the constitutional limits of federal power in domestic affairs. All agree that there are certain limitations on government action, whether by the federal government or by states and localities,
that derive from the constitutional requirement to respect certain individual and corporate rights. Beyond this, however, the debates and issues grow more complicated and controversial. Is federal power limited chiefly by the fact that the national government is a government of enumerated powers, as set forth in Article I of the U.S. Constitution? Does this limitation still have any effective influence? Or have understandings of these powers, and of what may be necessary and proper to implement them, evolved to a point that Congress feels no constraint and courts find no grounds for policing any limits? Alternatively, is federal power limited chiefly by the decentralized features of the Constitution, which enable states to push back against federal actions, or by the force of political and social movements, which can enforce limits by means of the political and electoral process?
This theme is intentionally broad, so that it embraces campus programs that promote understanding of great constitutional questions, particularly as they are relevant to contemporary issues.
Special consideration will be given to proposals that include matching funds from your college or university. Many members of the JMC network of Fellows have agreed to make themselves available as speakers or panelists for Constitution Day events. A list of them will shortly be made available on the JMC website. We encourage applicants to consider JMC Fellows as speakers for your event, and the JMC welcomes candidates as speakers who have yet to participate in JMC-sponsored programs.
Copies of the talk(s) or other educational material (the winning essays in a contest, for example) should be forwarded to the JMC within 30 days after the event. The faculty member requesting support agrees to secure permission from the speaker(s) to allow the JMC to use copies of the talk(s) in its print materials and on its website. The JMC does not request the copyright for the talk(s).
Proposals should be sent to:
Michael L. Andrews, Ph.D.
Vice President
Jack Miller Center for Teaching America’s
Founding Principles and History
Bala Pointe Office Centre
111 Presidential Blvd., Suite 146
Philadelphia, PA 19004
mandrews@gojmc.org
Phone: 484-436-2061
Fax: 484-436-2069
Scholars who have expressed an interest in being speakers (though not required for funding) include:
| John Agresto | Former President, Saint Johns College |
| Nick Buccola | Linfield College |
| James Ceaser | University of Virginia |
| Alfred Cuzan | University of West Florida |
| John Dinan | Wake Forrest College |
| Robert Faulkner | Boston College |
| Benjamin Kleinerman | Michigan State University |
| Daniel Klinghard | College of Holy Cross |
| Peter Lawler | Berry College |
| Sean Mattie | Clayton State University |
| Wilfred McClay | University of Tennessee, Chatanooga |
| Glen Moots | Northwood University |
| Michael Munger | Duke University |
| Phillip Munoz | Notre Dame |
| Jonathan O’Niel | Georgia Southern university |
| Evan Oxman | Lake Forrest College |
| Patrick Peel | Ohio University |
| Paul Rahe | Hillsdale College |
| Colleen Sheehan | Villanova |
| James Stoner | Louisiana State University |
| George Thomas | Claremont McKenna College |
| Jeffery Tulis | University of Texas |
| Lynn Uzzell | Jepson School of Leadership Studies |
| Bradley Watson | Saint Vincent College |
| Stephen Wrinn | Editor, University Press of Kentucky |
| Scot Yenor | Boise State University |
| Michael Zuckert | Notre Dame |
Facebook Constitution Day Campaign
January 18th, 2012 - Please join us in preparation for the celebration of the 225th Anniversary of the Constitution of the United States.
Read more
John Zumbrunnen Joins the JMC Constitution Day Steering Group
January 18th, 2012 - The Jack Miller Center is proud to announce that Professor John Zumbrunnen has joined the JMC Constitution Day Initiative Steering Group.
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