- Over at Balkinization, a terrific slate of contributors has been reflecting on Alison LaCroix's The Interbellum Constitution. Posts are now available by Aaron Hall, Evelyn Atkinson, Jane Manners, Simon Gilhooley, Anne Twitty, Anna Law, Rachel Shelden, Greg Ablavsky, and Jonathan Gienapp, with more to come.
- Noah Rosenblum, NYU Law, discusses Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy in WilmerHale's podcast series. "Leveraging his background as a legal historian, Rosenblum provides historical context and explains how applying a traditional Constitutional interpretation to the case increases its complexity."
- The Securities and Exchange Commission held a 90th Anniversary Celebration, including remarks by Michael Beschloss and Joel Seligman. The recording is here.
- George Garnett asks why constitutional history is coming back in fashion in university history departments in Britain (History Today).
- Learning to teach Milliken v. Bradley at “a two-week institute, 'Democracy in Education: A View from Detroit,' at the Walter P. Reuther Library” at Wayne State University (Chalkbeat).
- The Evolution of the U.S. Constitution: A Constitution Day Look Back and Forward, sponsored by the Historical Society of the New York Courts, et al. It is a conversation with my former student, Tyler Rose Clemons, St. John’s University School of Law. DRE
- The Comfort Fund of the University of Sydney’s law school, founded in July 1940 “to keep legal men and students in the Services in touch with the school and the legal professions, but the main object of the fund was to provide reading matter to those whose name was on the roll.”
- George Yin, UVA Law, on what Stanley Surrey would have made of the New Textualism (UVA Law).
- From In Custodia Legis: The Life and Trial of Anne Bonny.
- ICYMI: “Explore the history of politics and the Constitution in ‘A More or Less Perfect Union’” with Judge Douglas H. Ginsburg (NBC Montana).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.