
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Total monthly reach
Estimated from 1 chart position in 1 market.
By chart position
- 🇳🇿NZ · Education#783K to 10K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
2.1K to 7K🎙 Biweekly cadence·7 episodes·Long inactive - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
3K to 10K🇳🇿100% - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
900 to 3K
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
Recent episodes
The Scottish Court of Session Project: Learning from Legal Archives with Jim Ambuske
May 13, 2022
52m 06s
Authoritarian Constitutionalism with Paul Fisher
Mar 25, 2022
38m 53s
Douglass Day and the Colored Conventions Project: Nineteenth-Century Black Activism with Denise Burgher and Jim Casey
Feb 22, 2022
1h 07m 45s
Reconstructing Reconstruction: Constitutionalism and the End of Slavery with Kiana McAllister and Erica Croft
Nov 1, 2021
34m 56s
Hidden Laws: State Constitutions and National Change with Robinson Woodward-Burns
Oct 19, 2021
30m 14s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/13/22 | ![]() The Scottish Court of Session Project: Learning from Legal Archives with Jim Ambuske | In this episode, Grace talks to Dr Jim Ambuske, digital historian in residence at the Washington Library in Mount Vernon, Virginia, about his extensive work in digital legal history. Legal history is a daunting topic for many scholars, especially if they lack formal training in the law. But legal treatises, court records, and other remnants of historical legal systems can offer a broad and deep well of source material to the enterprising researcher. A constellation of digital humanities projects – the Quill Project among them – are attempting to make these sources more easily accessible, and to help historians explore the full range of insights that these records can offer. In this episode, Grace talks to Dr Jim Ambuske, digital historian in residence at the Washington Library in Mount Vernon, Virginia, about his extensive work in digital legal history. | 52m 06s | |
| 3/25/22 | ![]() Authoritarian Constitutionalism with Paul Fisher | Grace Mallon talks to Paul Fisher, a practising barrister and academic lawyer, about his research into constitutional law in post-Soviet non-democracies. Constitutionalism is something we often associate with limited government and the protection of the rights of citizens. But democracies aren’t the only governments with constitutions. Since the Age of Revolutions, many of the world’s most repressive regimes have drafted and promulgated constitutions that claim to protect the rights of the people, preserve the separation of powers, and minimise the reach of the executive branch. In this episode Grace talks to Paul Fisher, a practising barrister and academic lawyer, about his research into constitutional law in post-Soviet non-democracies. Paul’s research is funded by an Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Studentship offered through the UCL, Bloomsbury and East London ("UBEL") ESRC Doctoral Training Partnership. | 38m 53s | |
| 2/22/22 | ![]() Douglass Day and the Colored Conventions Project: Nineteenth-Century Black Activism with Denise Burgher and Jim Casey | The Quill Project Conventions Podcast Grace Mallon talks to Denise Burgher and Jim Casey about the Colored Conventions Project, a digital project reconstructing the history of the Colored Conventions movement of the nineteenth century, and about Douglass Day, their annual community history event in honour of the chosen birthday of Frederick Douglass on Valentine's Day | 1h 07m 45s | |
| 11/1/21 | ![]() Reconstructing Reconstruction: Constitutionalism and the End of Slavery with Kiana McAllister and Erica Croft | Grace Mallon talks to Kiana McAllister and Erica Croft about the work they're doing on the Reconstruction Amendments with Quill, and what this original research can tell us about these brief, but transformative items of American Constitutional law. | 34m 56s | |
| 10/19/21 | ![]() Hidden Laws: State Constitutions and National Change with Robinson Woodward-Burns | Grace Mallon and Nicholas Cole talk to Robinson Woodward-Burns about his new book 'Hidden Laws: How State Constitutions Stabilise American Politics.' | 30m 14s | |
| 10/7/21 | ![]() Poor Lord Wensleydale: A Beginner's Guide to the British Constitution with Robert Saunders | Grace Mallon and Nicholas Cole talk to Robert Saunders about what makes Britain's constitution unique and what challenges it faces in a turbulent period for UK politics and government. | 43m 29s | |
| 9/29/21 | ![]() Accident and Force: Making American Constitutions with Nicholas Cole | Grace Mallon and Nicholas Cole discuss how a historian learns to code, where the idea of a Constitutional Convention came from, and what's next for the Quill Project. | 41m 23s |
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Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
