- The Centre for English Legal History’s recent talk with former LHB Guest Blogger Thomas McSweeney, William & Mary Law on his book, Priests of the Law: Roman Law and the Making of the Common Law's First Professionals, is available here.
- McCulloch Overruled? The Odyssey of a Landmark Case, a lecture by David Schwartz, University of Wisconsin Law School, is now available on the YouTube channel of the Supreme Court Historical Society.
- From the Washington Post's "Made by History" section: Anna K. Danziger Halperin (New York Historical Society), "Biden has chance to reverse 50 years of failure on child-care policy"; Julia Ott (the New School), "While tax breaks favoring the rich may appear race-neutral, they aren’t"; Samantha Barbas (University at Buffalo School of Law), "A major Supreme Court First Amendment decision could be at risk"; and more.
- From History News Network: Kara Dixon Vuic (Texas Christian University), "A Faulty Court Precedent on Selective Service Leaves the Last Legal Sex Discrimination in Place."
- Ross Davies speculates on the origins of the Green Bag–the legal periodical, we mean, not the cloth, draw-string sack–in Legal-Bibliographical Roots: Fragments of a Green Bag Origin Story.
- In Custodia Legis reports that Congress.gov has added "30,000 Bills and Resolutions from 1799-1873."
- John O'Dowd's appreciation of Andrew Bremner Lyall, a historian of East African land law eighteenth-century Ireland and the law of slavery, appears in the Irish Times.
- Congratulations to former LHB Guest Blogger and current Editor of Law and History Review Gautham Rao upon his election to the Advisory Council of the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic.
- The nicest rejection letter ever turns out to be written by a legal historian.
- From the web-based Journal of the American Revolution: Haimo Li on "The Bolingbrokean Constitutional Argument in John Adams’s 1766 Clarendon Letter."
- From the Career Advice section at Insider Higher Ed: "When Should You Submit Your Scholarly Book Proposal?"