Latest Violence prevention Podcast Episodes

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5144, Serving Your Country: Active Citizenship, Part 4

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 31, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
When you serve your country, you are promoting the common good; that is, the good of everyone in the United States. There are several ways to serve your country. Listen to learn a few! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5143, Political Participation: Active Citizenship, Part 3

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 30, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Elections have consequences. If you want a say in the political future of our nation, it is up to you to get involved. Luckily, there are many ways to accomplish this. Listen to learn how! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5142, Being an Active Citizen: Active Citizenship, Part 2

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 29, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Active citizenship means getting involved in the life of your community and nation so that you can help determine the country's future. But how do you do this? Find out more today! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5141, Being an Informed Citizen: Active Citizenship, Part 1

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 28, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Most American citizens 18 years of age and older have the right to vote and choose our representatives who make our laws. But it is your obligation to cast an informed and responsible vote. Listen for more! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5140, When Isn't a Warrant Warranted? The Right to Privacy, Part 12

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 24, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
During the 1960s the Supreme Court held that searches conducted without warrants are inherently unreasonable. By the 1970s the Court had recognized a number of exceptions to the warrant requirement. We cover a few examples of those exceptions in today's podcast. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5139, Probable Cause: How Do Warrants Work? The Right to Privacy, Part 11

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 23, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
The Fourth Amendment protects people and their personal effects against unreasonable searches and seizures. It also requires applications for warrants to be supported by probable cause and requires a judge to decide whether probable cause exists. How do officials obtain warrants? We'll explain in...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5138, Unreasonable Searches and Seizures: The Right to Privacy, Part 10

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 22, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution protects against unreasonable searches and seizures, but it seeks to strike a balance between the need for order and each individual's rights. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5137, Fourth Amendment and Technology: The Right to Privacy, Part 9

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 21, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
There have been vast technological changes since the ratification of the Fourth Amendment in 1791, and the courts have been asked to interpret the significance of ever-changing technology and surveillance techniques. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5135, The Fourth Amendment: The Right to Privacy, Part 7

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 17, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
The Fourth Amendment grew directly out of the American colonial experience. It protects against unreasonable searches and seizures by government officials. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5134, Protection Against Unreasonable Search and Seizure: The Right to Privacy, Part 6

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 16, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
The protection against unreasonable search and seizure was in part a reaction against the general warrants issued by the British that so enraged American colonists in the prelude to the Revolution. The Fourth Amendment and state constitutions protect against unreasonable searches and seizures. ...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5133, John Adams and James Otis: The Right to Privacy, Part 5

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 15, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
John Adams claimed that James Otis's speech against general warrants was the first act of colonial resistance to British policies. Despite his fame, Otis's career would be ended by a violent attack by a British customs official. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5132, James Otis Speaks Against General Warrants: The Right to Privacy, Part 4

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 14, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
General warrants were unpopular in the American colonies, where they were used to search for evidence of smuggling. In a five-hour speech in February 1761, James Otis spoke out against them, saying that they would andquot;totally annihilateandquot; the British common-law tradition that andquot;A...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5130, The Problem with General Warrants: The Right to Privacy, Part 2

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 10, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
General warrants allowed British officials to search people, businesses, homes, and property indiscriminately. British officials in the American colonies used such warrants to collect taxes, to recover stolen goods including -- enslaved people -- and to prosecute smugglers. Center for Civ...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5129, Historical Origins of the Right to Privacy: The Right to Privacy, Part 1

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 09, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Americans inherited from British history the principle that andquot;a man's home is his castle.andquot; This idea can be traced to the opinion of Sir Edward Coke in Semayne's Case in 1604. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5128, andquot;Our Country's Aim Will Remain True Towards Justiceandquot;: Justice Paula Nakayama, Part 6

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 08, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
In light of the recent rise in violence toward Asian Americans, Justice Nakayama of the Hawai'i Supreme Court emphasizes that, andquot;we must encourage everybody to learn, understand and deeply appreciate and embrace the rule of law in our country.andquot; Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5127, What Does a Civic and Constitutional Education Mean to You?: Justice Paula Nakayama, Part 5

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 07, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
In today's podcast, we ask Justice Nakayama: What does a civic and constitutional education mean to you? And, why have you dedicated so many years to ensuring greater access to civics for more Americans? Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5126, Learning About Your Role As an American: Justice Paula Nakayama, Part 4

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 06, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
A well-informed citizenry is the cornerstone of our democracy, which is why Justice Nakayama believes it's essential for all Americans to learn about their roles and responsibilities as citizens. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5125, Why Should Young People Consider Public Service?: Justice Paula Nakayama, Part 3

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 03, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
andquot;When you are a public servant, it is important to realize that you are indeed serving the public. I think about that all the time, and I consider it a higher calling.andquot; In our episode, Justice Nakayama shares her perspective on the value of public service. Center for Civic E...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5124, One of the First Women on the Hawai'i Supreme Court: Justice Paula Nakayama, Part 2

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 02, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Today, we ask Justice Nakayama: What is it like to be one of the first women to serve on the Hawai'i Supreme Court and one of the few Asian American women serving as a state supreme court justice? While Justice Nakayama shares times in which she faced discrimination, she nonetheless believes that...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5123, How Did You Become a Justice on the Hawai'i Supreme Court?: Justice Paula Nakayama, Part 1

60-Second Civics Podcast - May 01, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
This episode is a rebroadcast from our interview series with then Associate Justice of the Hawai'i Supreme Court, Paula Nakayama. Justice Nakayama served on the Hawaii Supreme Court from 1993 until 2023. In our first episode, Justice Nakayama shares how a lot of hard work and a little luck helped...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5122, Equality and the American Mind: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 20

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 30, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Where did the idea of universal human equality, a common American idea, come from? Religious movements in colonial America helped spread the idea of universal moral human equality, including equality among social classes. Listen to today's podcast for more! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5121, Stoicism, Christianity, and Moral Equality: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 19

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 29, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
In a recent episode, we discussed the origins of Americans' sense of political equality, but America's Founders also possessed a strong sense of moral equality. Indeed, the idea of the moral equality of human beings has ancient origins. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5120, Americans' Sense of Political Equality: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 18

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 26, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
The Declaration of Independence states that all men, meaning all people, are created equal. But where did this idea come from? Ideas of natural political equality were developed in seventeenth-century England and exported to its colonies across the North Atlantic. Learn more in today's episode! ...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5119, andquot;All Men Are Created Equal:andquot; The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 17

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 25, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
The Declaration of Independence states that among the andquot;truthsandquot; that Americans hold to be andquot;self-evidentandquot; is that andquot;all Men are created equal.andquot; But what did Thomas Jefferson mean by this statement? Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5118, The American Creed: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 16

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 24, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Thomas Jefferson said that his purpose in writing the Declaration of Independence was to express a shared understanding of andquot;the American mind.andquot; Over the course of a few days in June 1776, Jefferson laid out the most fundamental principles and central political beliefs of the Americ...

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Incorporating Equity into IVP work

Injury & Violence Prevention INdepth - April 23, 2024 12:00 - 7 minutes ★★★★★ - 3 ratings
In this INbetween episode, host Mighty Fine talks about the recently released "Equity in Injury and Violence Prevention Vision and Call to Action" document from Safe States Alliance. Recommendations provided to advance equity injury and violence prevention are provided in this resource, and Migh...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5117, Why Americans Held These Truths to Be Self-evident: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Govt. in the Colonies, Part 15

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 23, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Why did the writers of the Declaration of Independence andquot;hold these Truths to be self-evident?andquot; Among other things, these Americans were deeply influenced by the teachings of Christianity and English republicanism. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5116, The Meaning of Self-Evident Truths: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Govt. in the Colonies, Part 14

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 22, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
The second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence begins like this: andquot;We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.andqu...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 4864, The Intolerable Acts: The Road to Independence, Part 12

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 19, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Following the Boston Tea Party, the British government responded with what colonists called the Intolerable Acts, a series of Punitive Acts that, among other things, closed Boston Harbor to all trade.??Listen to today???s episode to learn more! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5114, Elections in Colonial America: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government, Part 12

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 18, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Elections in the colonial era and in the early American republic were rather uncivilized compared to today's standards. Explore the differences between then and now in today's episode! Center for Civic Education

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