- The New Books Network has a new podcast up on Richard J. Ross and Brian Owensby’s Justice in a New World: Negotiating Legal Intelligibility in British, Iberian, and Indigenous America (NYU Press, 2018).
- The article No-Fault Divorce Reform in the 1950s: The Lost History of the “Greatest Project” of the National Association of Women Lawyers, by Laura Oren, professor emerita at the University of Houston Law Center, is now available from Law and History Review via the Cambridge Core
- ICYMI: Jan Lewis's Rutgers obituary. The Switch-in-Time rides again. GQ endorses the rule of law and "the System."
- May we recommend The Scout Report? It's a good way to find out about humanities resources on the internet. You can sign up for the weekly e-mail (every Friday) here.
- From the Washington Post's Made by History section: Carly Goodman (American Friends Service Committee) on "the shadowy network shaping Trump's anti-immigration policies"; Claire Potter (the New School) on "why lying, rather than sexual assault, could topple Brett Kavanaugh"; Kimberly A. Hamlin (Miami University in Ohio) on "what happens when women talk to Congress about sex"; Sarah Milov (University of Virginia) on how "like the tobacco industry, e-cigarette manufacturers are targeting children"; and more.
- Someone at the Hagley Museum and Library read guest blogger Laura Phillips Sawyer's recent posts about her research there. They encourage more legal historians to come take advantage of their collections.