Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2561761/fan_mail/new] In this episode, Crime and Popular Culture Office Hours takes a brief departure from the American Crime Landscapes series to examine a different kind of artifact. Instead of analyzing a film, television show, or work of literature, we turn our attention to perhaps the most influential artifact in American criminal justice: the United States Constitution. Why do Americans celebrate Independence Day with fireworks, parades, and family traditions while Constitution Day passes with relatively little notice? Is the Declaration of Independence simply more compelling, or have we overlooked the document that has shaped our government, protected our liberties, and structured our criminal justice system for two and a half centuries? Host Kevin Buckler explores the Constitution as a cultural artifact, traces the history of Constitution Day, examines how the Constitution and the Bill of Rights influence everyday criminal justice, and argues that Constitution Day deserves to stand alongside Independence Day as one of America's great civic holidays. Along the way, he reflects on a personal experience that sparked this idea and imagines what a true national celebration of constitutional literacy could look like. The American experiment did not end with independence. It began there. The Constitution ensured it could endure.
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