Watch or listen to our expert recaps! The Supreme Court's First Oral Argument — A Recap The Supreme Court heard its first teleconference arguments this week, and the National Constitution Center collaborated with C-SPAN to broadcast live argument recaps. Listen to this recap of United States Patent and Trademark Office v. Booking.com featuring host Jeffrey Rosen and three experts who filed briefs in the case—Corynne McSherry of Electronic Frontier Foundation, professor Rebecca Tushnet of Harvard Law School, and Margaret Duncan of Loyola University Chicago School of Law. Listen > Reviving Trust and Rebuilding Institutions In conversation with Jeffrey Rosen, conservative intellectual Yuval Levin discusses the decline in trust in American institutions as told in his new book A Time to Build: From Family and Community to Congress and the Campus, How Recommitting to Our Institutions Can Revive the American Dream. Listen > Watch > How a College Term Paper Led to a Constitutional Amendment by Scott Bomboy Read > 10 Fascinating Facts About President Ulysses Grant by Al Brophy Read > This week, in teleconference arguments that allowed the public to listen in live for the first time in history—the Supreme Court heard arguments in a range of cases involving access to contraceptives, robocall regulations, and more. The National Constitution Center collaborated with C-SPAN to recap those arguments. You can listen to the first recap on this week's episode of We the People or watch them all on our YouTube channel, linked below. The Court will hear additional arguments next Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, starting at 10 a.m. EDT, and Jeff will be back on C-SPAN to recap them with some of the leading experts involved in the cases. So please tune in! From the National Constitution Center Watch oral argument recaps on the National Constitution Center's YouTube channel A Return to the Culture Wars in Historic Arguments Constitution Daily article by Marcia Coyle Article III, Section 1 "The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court..." Read Interpretations on the Interactive Constitution > Online Civic Learning Opportunities The National Constitution Center hosts free lectures and civil dialogue sessions on the Constitution that students across America can access online through a home computer, laptop, or phone. Recent lectures include: Second Amendment America's Founding Documents Watch other past lectures on the Interactive Constitution > Read > the roundup of this week's articles on The Battle for the Constitution—a partnership with The Atlantic that explores constitutional debates in American life. About the National Constitution Center The National Constitution Center in Philadelphia brings together people of all ages and perspectives, across America and around the world, to learn about, debate, and celebrate the greatest vision of human freedom in history, the U.S. Constitution. A private, nonprofit organization, the Center serves as America’s leading platform for constitutional education and debate, fulfilling our congressional charter “to disseminate information about the U.S. Constitution on a nonpartisan basis.” SUPPORT OUR WORK Questions or comments? Email us at
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