Abigail Noel Fisher speaks to the media after U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in her case on October 10, 2012 in Washington, DC.

The Case for Abigail Fisher: A History of Affirmative-Action Cases

Three affirmative-action cases set precedent for the Supreme Court as they make a decision on Fisher vs. University of Texas.
"MI Right-to-Work Protest - 11 December 2012 - crowd2" by File made available by Equality Michigan through the LGBT Free Media CollectiveEnglish | +/− - File made available by Equality Michigan through the LGBT Free Media CollectiveEnglish | +/−. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:MI_Right-to-Work_Protest_-_11_December_2012_-_crowd2.jpeg#/media/File:MI_Right-to-Work_Protest_-_11_December_2012_-_crowd2.jpeg">Wikimedia Commons</a>

Scott Walker, The Koch Brothers, and the History of Right to Work Laws

The Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 gave states the ability to enact right to work laws, granting opponents of unions the ability to institute open-shop laws.
Upwards looking shot of city skyscrapers

Why Antitrust Progressives Didn’t Curb the Power of Big Business

The limits of Progressive ideology in curbing antitrust practices in the U.S.
Hands on a computer keyboard

Obscenity and Unintended Consequences

In the Journal of American Studies, Amanda Frisken investigated how an earlier set of standards around obscenity emerged in the 1870s.
Excerpt of letter from Alexander Murdock detailing the geography of the Battle of Gettysburg

Finding Your Place in Letters

For scholars of American history, letter-writing makes historical research possible.