- From Völkerrechtsblog: a post by Katharina Isabel Schmidt (JSD candidate, Yale Law School) "On American 'Dilettantism' and German 'Pedantry': A Comparative Look at Law Journal Culture and the Future of Legal Knowledge Production."
- It was a good week for legal history at Princeton University. On November 19, Peter Conti-Brown, a doctoral candidate in History, presented to LEGS (“Law-Engaged Graduate Students”) on The Institutions of Federal Reserve Independence. On November 20, Barbara Welke, Minnesota, presented The Course of a Life: Preliminary Thoughts on a History of the Curriculum Vitae, to the Workshop in American Studies.
- Nathan Dorn, Curator of Rare Books at the Law Library of Congress, has published Magna Carta: A Charter for the Ages on the Library of Congress Blog (and in the Library of Congress Magazine).
- From PQ Monthly: Oregon State Bar Unveils Diversity & Inclusion Story Wall.
- From History News Network: Harlow Giles Unger on "Why Naming John Marshall Chief Justice Was John Adams’s 'Greatest Gift' to the Nation."