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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Sept. 5, 2007) — Gun control is the topic of
the Third Annual Nolan Fowler Constitution Day Celebration at Tennessee
Tech University, set for 7 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 17, in Derryberry Hall
Auditorium.
Joyce Malcolm, a legal history professor at George Mason University School
of Law and one of the nation’s leading experts on gun control, will
lead a presentation titled “The Second Amendment: Inalienable or
Obsolete?”
An article in the Chronicle of Higher Education has described
her as “one of the most influential scholars to make the historical
argument in favor of the individual right to bear arms.”
Malcolm, who has previously taught at such prestigious institutions as
Princeton University, Bentley College, Boston University, Northeastern
University and Cambridge University, has written numerous articles and
books about gun control, the Second Amendment and individual rights.
Her articles and essays have been published in The Wall Street Journal,
The Financial Times, USA Today, The Boston Globe and other newspapers,
and she is a frequent guest on radio and television shows in the United
States and Great Britain.
To Keep and Bear Arms: The Origins of an Anglo-American Right; Guns
and Violence: The English Experience; and The Struggle for Sovereignty:
Seventeenth Century English Political Tracts are titles among the
six books Malcolm has written.
Malcolm has served as a senior advisor at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology Security Studies Program, visiting scholar at Massachusetts
Center for Renaissance Studies, James Madison Fellow at Princeton University,
Bye Fellow at Robinson College of Cambridge University and regular contributor
to the British Social Affairs Unit web site.
She’s a former recipient of Bentley College’s Award for Excellence
in Research.
All educational institutions receiving federal funds are required each
year in September to host a celebration commemorating the Sept. 17, 1787,
signing of the U.S. Constitution.
Fowler, a retired history professor and longtime constitutional law instructor
at TTU, provided a $150,000 endowment to establish the Constitution Day
Celebration at the university.
Chairperson of this year’s committee to plan the event is Sharon
Whitney, political science professor.
For more information about TTU’s Nolan Fowler Constitution Day
Celebration, call TTU’s history department at 931/372-3332.
--Tracey Hackett
This information posted 10 September 2007
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