- Via the Florida State University History Department: information about the Dr. Laurie M. Wood Fund for the Undergraduate Study of History. The Fund "will provide support to undergraduate students studying in the FSU
Department of History." Further information is available here (scroll down to the end).
- Victoria Saker Woeste on "The Charlottesville Verdict: American Antisemitism and Resurgent Nationalisms" (AHA Perspectives on History).
- Over at Legal History Miscellany: Sara M. Butler on Legislating Sanctity: Protecting the Graveyard in Medieval England.
- LHB Founder Mary L. Dudziak on "The Unhappy Legal History of the War Powers Resolution" (Modern American History).
- Over at the Historical Society of the New York Courts: a podcast with attorney Gary Stein on his new book, Justice for Sale: Graft, Greed, and a Crooked Federal Judge in 1930s Gotham.
- New in the American Journal of Legal History and Oxford Academic: Limping Marriages: Race, Class, and the Rise of Domicile-Based Divorce Jurisdiction in the British Empire, by Priyasha Saksena.
- Now out from behind a paywall: Law & Laundry: White Laundresses, Chinese Laundrymen, and the Origins of Muller v. Oregon, by former LHB Blogger Emily Prifogle, University of Michigan Law School.
- Wednesday, August 16, 2pm ET, via the YouTube channel of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum: Japanese American Incarceration Through the Lens of Ansel Adams.
- Boston University Law welcomes its new faculty, including Jed Handelsman Shugerman.
- Life Story: Joseph Story (1779-1845), by Nicole Carlson Maffei, in the Supreme Court Historical Society series, Civics Resources for Teachers and Students
- ICYMI: More on that merger of the Virginia Museum of History & Culture and the John Marshall Center for Constitutional History & Civics (Richmond Magazine). Lee Fennell on Karl N. Llewellyn in her remarks at the Diploma and Hooding Ceremony at the University of Chicago Law School. A notice of Sabarish Suresh’s receipt of the Julien Mezey Dissertation Award for his doctoral dissertation, “The Unconscious of the Indian Constitution: Traumatic Histories and Repetitions” (Hans India).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.