- The Max Planck Institute for European Legal History invites doctoral students and young researchers to participate in study sessions on “the basic tools for beginning research in the archives of the Holy See and of other Roman ecclesiastical institutions as well as to provide elements for a critical interpretation of the sources and their contextualization through the most current literature.” More.
- Congratulations to Emory Law's Deborah Dinner and the other Law and Public Affairs Fellow at Princeton University for 2020-2021!
- Robert Pigott on Elihu Root and New York City real estate in Judicial Notice, the journal of the Historical Society of the New York Courts.
- Over at Talking Legal History, Maddalena Marinari, Assistant Professor in History; Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies; and Peace Studies at Gustavus Adolphus College, speaks to Siobhan M. M. Barco about her book Unwanted: Italian and Jewish Mobilization against Restrictive Immigration Laws, 1882–1965 (University of North Carolina Press, 2020).
- The Influenza Epidemic of 1918 in the Library of Congress's Chronicling America.
- Law in Times of Crisis at the University of Minnesota Law Library's Riesenfeld Rare Books Center
- Have you checked out Annenberg Classroom's videos and other materials on the Constitution, including Supreme Court landmarks, including Miranda v. Arizona and New York Times v. Sullivan, as well as The Story of the Bill of Rights.
- ICYMI: A notice and query on the female lawyer Mary Anderson Matthews (1878-1948) of Palmyra, Mo. The quarrel over originalism within the right (National Review). Charly B. Gay and Nancy Phillips on Constance Baker Motley in The Gramblinite.
- Update: WHYY and the Philadelphia Tribune on that Ken Burns series on the Constitution in Times of Crisis at the National Constitution Center. Also: TR descendants heard from, here and here.