- Here’s a description of Citizenship and Claims of Belonging in Australian Law and History, a research project based at the University of Sydney Law School, funded byt he Australian Research Council Special Research Initiatives.
- From the Washington Post's "Made by History" section: Michelle Bezark (Northwestern University), "History shows how to fix the U.S.'s abysmal maternal and infant mortality rates"; David Karol (University of Maryland, College Park), "Abortion will remain a national issue no matter what the Supreme Court does"Unhappy about privacy laws? One teen showed how to force change"; Amy Sohn, "The moral crusader behind some of our most draconian, patriarchal laws."
- Catch this virtual book event for South Asian Migrations in Global History: Labor, Law, and Wayward Lives, edited by Neilesh Bose (University of Victoria): Thursday, Jan.13 at 4pm PST.
- Rethinking the Boundaries of Class: Labor History and Theories of Class and Capitalism, Julie Greene’s presidential address for the Labor and Working Class History Association, is open access in Labor though December 31.
- New online from the American Journal of Legal History and Oxford Academic: The American Bar Association Looks to England, 1924 and 1957, by Christopher J Rowe.
- ICYMI: Chief Justice Roberts and the Blackmun Papers (ABA Journal). Allen Guelzo discussed the Historical Foundation of the Roles and Powers of the President in a virtual event hosted by The Heritage Foundation (C-Span Classroom). Fernanda Pirie on What Ancient Laws Can Teach Us About Holding Autocrats to Account Today (Time).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.