EPISODE · Aug 12, 2019 · 30 MIN
PAWcast: Sarah Seo ’02 *16 on How Cars Changed Constitutional Law (August 2019)
from Princeton Alumni Weekly Podcasts · host Princeton Alumni Weekly
In popular culture the car is seen as a symbol of freedom. But as Sarah Seo ’02 *16 writes, driving a car is also “the most policed aspect of everyday life.” Seo, a legal historian and the author of Policing the Open Road: How Cars Transformed American Freedom, discusses the history of the automobile and its impact on the law and law enforcement in the United States, from a new interpretation of the Fourth Amendment to the issue of discriminatory policing.
What this episode covers
In popular culture the car is seen as a symbol of freedom. But as Sarah Seo ’02 *16 writes, driving a car is also “the most policed aspect of everyday life.” Seo, a legal historian and the author of Policing the Open Road: How Cars Transformed American Freedom, discusses the history of the automobile and its impact on the law and law enforcement in the United States, from a new interpretation of the Fourth Amendment to the issue of discriminatory policing.
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PAWcast: Sarah Seo ’02 *16 on How Cars Changed Constitutional Law (August 2019)
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