Welcome to Iowa Public Television! If you are seeing this message, you are using a browser that does not support web standards. This site will look much better in a browser that supports web standards, but it is accessible to any browser or Internet device. Read more on our technical tips page.

Iowa Public Television

 
In order to view this video, you must install Microsoft Silverlight

This video player uses Microsoft Silverlight.

Web Exclusive: Iowa Constitutional History and Same Sex Marriage

Duration: 13:55

This segment is a web exclusive from Iowa Public Television, which continues the on-air discussion from The Iowa Journal's April 23, 2009 broadcast.

In light of the current Iowa Supreme Court ruling on same-sex marriage, the history of Iowa's Constitution has taken center stage.

Supreme Court Justice Mark Cady, who wrote the unanimous marriage decision, at one point invoked the court’s first-ever decision, in 1839, which struck down slavery in the state.

The Iowa Journal will look at some of the civil rights decisions made early in Iowa's formative years, and see how those issues have played out since then.

The discussion will center on this concept of Iowa as a haven for civil rights – is it truly a state that puts individual and minority rights first? What happens if Iowa votes for a constitutional convention in 2010?

Guests on this program include: Mark Kende, Des Moines: Professor of Law; James Madison Chair in Constitutional Law and Director of the Drake Constitutional Law Center and Karen Thalacker, Waverly: Lecturer in Public Law, Wartburg College; Attorney, Gallagher, Langlas, and Gallagher; Author, “The New Lawyer’s Handbook."


Tags:

Post Date: April 23, 2009