• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Starting Points

The Place Where It All Starts

  • Articles
  • Conversations
    • Discussions
    • Podcasts
  • About Us

Latest Articles

James Madison on a Free Press in a Republican Government

November 11, 2021
Cary Federman

The famous case of New York Times v. Sullivan (1964) involved an advertisement, written by civil rights advocates in Montgomery, Alabama and published by the New York Times, criticizing the Montgomery police department for its handling of civil rights issues. The advertisement did not mention Montgomery’s police commissioner, Lester Bruce (L.B.) Sullivan. Nevertheless, Sullivan rightly […]

Madison’s Offering at Clio’s Altar

November 10, 2021
Lynn Uzzell

James Madison knew that he was living through an important epoch in human history. In November of 1782, he began keeping a congressional diary. He did not attempt to record everything that took place in Congress, but instead jotted down events that he suspected would be of interest to posterity and that he knew would […]

James Madison on Federalism circa 1786-87

November 10, 2021
Lee Ward

My focus is James Madison’s reflections upon federalism in the months prior to the Federal Convention in Philadelphia.  My premise is that we can gain valuable insights into the origin of the American idea of federalism by examining this seminal framer’s thoughts on the subject as he prepared for the Convention in the summer of [...]

Slavery and the Constitution in Madisonian Perspective

November 4, 2021
Michael Zuckert

There is no need to rehearse in detail the various debates over the Founders and slavery that have roiled academic and political waters since the mid-twentieth century. Suffice it to say that the main antagonists can plausibly be called Neo-Garrisonians and Neo-Lincolnians, after William Lloyd Garrison, the famous abolitionist, and Abraham Lincoln. Today these two […]

A Tentative “Last Word” on James Madison as Father of the Constitution

November 4, 2021
Sanford V. Levinson

Professor Gibson has offered me the opportunity have the “last word” in our debate about James Madison, and I am glad to accept.  First, though, I want to express my deepest appreciation for the essay he wrote—I think roughly twice as long as my own!—in response to my remarks about Madison’s “fatherhood” of the Constitution.  […]

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 36
  • Go to Next Page »

Search

Latest Post

Taxing the Constitution: Are Trump’s Proposed Tariffs Legal?

October 29, 2024

Related Articles

  • Hannah Arendt on Statesmanship
  • Marbury v. Madison and the Question of John Marshall’s Judicial Activism
  • The Bible in Revolutionary America: A Guide to Human Nature and Human Government

More Articles

NEVER MISS AN ARTICLE

  • Sign up for the StartingPoints email newsletter and get the best articles delivered to your inbox weekly.
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy


Kinder Institute on Constitutional Democracy

Copyright © 2025 StartingPoints | All Rights Reserved. | Website Updated by Venta Marketing