- Someone, perhaps at the Biddle Law Library, has prepare a very good selected bibliography for that symposium at the University of Pennsylvania on The History, Theory, and Practice of Administrative Constitutionalism, October 19-20, 2018. And we're not just saying that because works by two of the three LHB Bloggers appear on it!
- Thanks to John Q. Barrett, St Johns Law, we learned that a video of the symposium Barnette at 75: The Past, Present, and Future of the ‘Fixed Star in Our Constitutional Constellation, held at Florida International University College of Law last week, is available here. Professor Barrett helpfully provides a time-stamped version of the program if you don't have the time to view the entire event.
- The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum and the Mid-Hudson Antislavery History Project will present an author talk and book signing with Susan Stessin-Cohn, coauthor of In Defiance: Runaways from Slavery in New York’s Hudson River Valley, 1735-1831 on Thursday, October 25, 2018 at 7:00 p.m. in the Henry A. Wallace Center at the FDR Presidential Library and Home.
- There's a lot of legal history in Cambridge University Press's Law and Christianity Series,edited by John Witte, Jr, Emory University.
- From the BBC: "The woman who fought for the right to be a prostitute," a preview of Rohit De's forthcoming book, A People's Constitution: Law and Everyday Life in the Indian Republic.
- News from Aotearoa/New Zealand: "Taranaki legal history was made on Wednesday, with the first ever bar admission ceremony conducted in Te Reo Maori." More.
- From the Washington Post's "Made by History" section: Amy S. Kaufman on "the medieval defense of Brett Kavanaugh," and more.