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60-Second Civics: Episode 5113, Qualifying to Vote in Early America: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 11

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 17, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
In the American colonies, the right to vote followed the British model: only free adult males who owned a certain amount of property could vote, though there were limited exceptions to this rule. Listen to learn more! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5112, Voting Rights in Colonial America: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 10

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 12, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Voting rights in colonial America depended on the ownership of property. In other words, a person had to own a certain amount of land, livestock, or other property in order to qualify to vote. Listen to learn more! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5111, Representative Democracy in Colonial America: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 9

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 11, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Each of the thirteen American colonies had some features of representative democracy that we still see today. For example, each of the colonies had a legislative, executive, and judicial branch. Learn more with today???s episode! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5109, The Massachusetts Body of Liberties: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 7

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 09, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Americans have had a tradition of written guarantees of rights since the time of the thirteen colonies. The Massachusetts Body of Liberties of 1641 provides a good example. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5108, Written Guarantees of Rights: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 6

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 08, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Despite the presence of indentured servitude and slavery in colonial America, many Americans enjoyed written guarantees of their rights. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5107, Slavery in Colonial America: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 5

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 05, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Slavery was present in the thirteen American colonies since at least the early 1600s. Until slavery was abolished in the mid-nineteenth century, almost 12 million Africans were transported against their will to America. Listen to today's podcast to learn more about the foundations of slavery in t...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5106, Indentured Servitude in Colonial America: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 4

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 04, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Land was plentiful in the thirteen American colonies, but labor was scarce. It was also expensive to sail from Britain to America. This reality created incentives for indentured servitude. Learn more about these colonists in today's episode! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5105, The Southern Colonies: The Basic Ideas of Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 3

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 03, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
The mostly rural and agricultural southern colonies differed a great deal from both the New England and Middle Colonies. Learn how in today's episode! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5104, The Middle Colonies: Basic Ideas of Rights and Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 2

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 02, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
America's Middle Colonies included today's states of Delaware, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. The Middle Colonies different in important ways from the New England colonies. Learn about these key differences in today's episode! Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5103, The New England Colonies: Basic Ideas of Rights and Constitutional Government in the Colonies, Part 1

60-Second Civics Podcast - April 01, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
The American colonies can be divided into three regions: New England, the Middle Colonies, and the Southern Colonies. At the time of American independence, in 1776, the New England colonies were Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts. Learn more about this group of colonies i...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5102, Marie Louise Bottineau Baldwin: Women's History Month, Part 21

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 29, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Marie Louise Bottineau Baldwin was a Native American activist, attorney, and advocate of women's right to vote. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5099, Susan B. Anthony: Women's History Month, Part 18

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 26, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
After her trial for having voted in an 1872 election, Susan B. Anthony explained to the judge the implications of her conviction: "My natural rights, my civil rights, my political rights, are all alike ignored. Robbed of the fundamental privilege of citizenship, I am degraded from the status of a...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5097, The Seneca Falls Convention: Women's History Month, Part 16

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 22, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
In 1848, about 300 activists met in Seneca Falls, New York, for the first convention in the United States devoted to women's rights. They discussed Elizabeth Cady Stanton's proposed Declaration of Sentiments, which mirrored the language of the Declaration of Independence. Center for Civic...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5096, The Forten Sisters: Women's History Month, Part 15

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 21, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Margaretta, Harriet, and Sarah Forten were three powerful African American campaigners for the abolition and women's rights movements. Harriet and Sarah married members of another prominent abolitionist family, the Purvises. Harriet and her husband Robert were involved in the Underground Railroad...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5092, Fanny Wright: Women's History Month, Part 11

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 15, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Fanny Wright was radical by the standards of her time. She was a writer and social activist who campaigned for equal rights for women, free and secular public education for both boys and girls, and the abolition of slavery, among other social and political issues. Wright was a fierce advocate of ...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5091, Mercy Otis Warren: Women's History Month, Part 10

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 14, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Mercy Otis Warren was a playwright, poet, historian, and Anti-Federalist political commentator during the American Revolution. She was a talented writer, admired for her skill and her dedication to the principles of natural rights behind the Revolution. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5090, Margaret Todd Whetten: Women's History Month, Part 9

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 13, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Margaret Todd Whetten and her daughters provided food, clothing, and support to American prisoners in New York City, despite being called by one British jailer the "damndest rebels in New York." They provided a safe refuge for American spies in their home, saving them from capture and certain han...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5089, Women During the Revolutionary War: Women's History Month, Part 8

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 12, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Women served the American cause in many ways during the Revolutionary War, even as combatants. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5088, The Daughters of Liberty: Women's History Month, Part 7

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 11, 2024 07:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
At the start of the American Revolution, women patriots organized into a group known as the Daughters of Liberty. Like their male counterparts, the Sons of Liberty, women took action, such as boycotts, to protest British policies. For example, they replace imported British tea with "liberty tea,"...

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Lending your voice to IVP - the importance of advocacy

Injury & Violence Prevention INdepth - March 07, 2024 20:00 - 42 minutes ★★★★★ - 3 ratings
In this episode, host Mighty Fine discusses the importance of advocacy in injury and violence prevention work at the state and national level. Topics include advocating in person on Capitol Hill along with finding opportunities to advocate virtually using online tools available to assist in the ...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5086, Nanye'hi: Women's History Month, Part 5

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 07, 2024 08:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Despite being known as the "War Woman of Chota," Nanye'hi, also known as Nancy Ward, was a Cherokee woman who would work for much of her life to ensure peace between the Cherokees and the Americans, while attempting to prevent the further seizure of Cherokee land. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5085, Elizabeth Freeman: Women's History Month, Part 4

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 06, 2024 08:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Elizabeth Freeman, also known as Mum Bett, escaped slavery in a way that was unusual: she took her case to court. She approached lawyer Theodore Sedgwick with this question: "I heard that paper read yesterday that says 'all men are born equal,' and that every man has a right to freedom ... won't ...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5084, Ona Judge: Women's History Month, Part 3

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 05, 2024 08:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Ona Judge escaped George and Martha Washington's household, where she was an enslaved housemaid, and made her way to Portsmouth, New Hampshire, where she eluded George Washington's determined attempts to capture her. She made a new life for herself in New Hampshire, marrying and having three chil...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5083, Coverture and the Colonial Era: Women's History Month, Part 2

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 04, 2024 08:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
A married woman living during the American colonial era would have lived under the legal doctrine called "coverture," where her legal identity was subsumed under that of her husband. William Blackstone wrote, "By marriage, the husband and wife are one person in the law: that is, the very being or...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5082, The Struggle for Equality: Women's History Month, Part 1

60-Second Civics Podcast - March 01, 2024 08:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
It's Women's History Month! All this month, 60-Second Civics will explain the struggle for equal rights for women and how our Constitution and laws evolved to make our nation a more representative democracy. In this episode, we briefly trace the struggle of women for equal voting rights in the Un...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5081, Important Figures in the Civil Rights Movement: Dr. Vicki Ross-Norris, Part 6

60-Second Civics Podcast - February 29, 2024 08:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Throughout her life, Dr. Ross-Norris has interacted with several prominent civil rights leaders, including Dr. Dorothy Height and Rev. Fauntroy. Learn more how these figures inspired the next generation of civil rights leaders in today's episode. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5080, Maya Angelou and Her Role as a Citizen: Dr. Vicki Ross-Norris, Part 5

60-Second Civics Podcast - February 28, 2024 08:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Maya Angelou, an African American poet and civil rights activist, used her artistic abilities to communicate the Black experience and serve as an instrument for others to understand African American culture. Listen as Dr. Vicki Ross-Norris recounts her interactions with Maya Angelou in today's ep...

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5079, Historically Black Colleges and Universities: Dr. Vicki Ross-Norris, Part 4

60-Second Civics Podcast - February 27, 2024 08:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
Today, we ask our guest, Dr. Vicki Ross-Norris, why historically black colleges and universities are important. In the episode, she shares her experience as a Howard University alumna and how attending an HBCU was significant to her as an African American. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5078, The Tuskegee Airmen: Dr. Vicki Ross-Norris, Part 3

60-Second Civics Podcast - February 26, 2024 08:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
In today's episode, Dr. Ross-Norris talks about the Tuskegee Airmen, a group her father belonged to and who taught her important lessons about civics and being an American. Center for Civic Education

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60-Second Civics: Episode 5077, Learning About the African American Experience: Dr. Vicki Ross-Norris, Part 2

60-Second Civics Podcast - February 22, 2024 08:00 - 1 minute ★★★★ - 75 ratings
In February, we celebrate Black History Month. Today we ask Dr. Ross-Norris: Why should all Americans learn about the African American experience? Listen to learn why! Center for Civic Education

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