- The Harvard Law Library’s rich collection on Magna Carta ""offers students an important link to the past and the present" (Harvard Law Bulletin).
- In an online program at Noon on November 4, 2025, the Supreme Court Historical Society will host a conversation by the authors of two published this fall on Justice Robert H. Jackson: G. Edward White, author of Robert H. Jackson: A Life in Judgment, and Gerard Magliocca, author of The Actual Art of Governing: Justice Robert H. Jackson’s Concurring Opinion in the Steel Seizure Case. Register here.
- Scott Bomboy's explainer on the Posse Comitatus and Insurrection Acts (National Constitution Center).
- Richard Re on Julian Mortenson's "The Executive Power Clause" and the history of presidential removals (Divided Argument).
- In the October 16 session of the of the Berkeley Legal History Workshop, "Hendrik Hartog will reflect on the development of the field of legal history and discuss inter-disciplinary collaboration in the legal context" (UC Berkeley Law).
- Clark University's notice of Aziz Rana's Constitution Day lecture on American Constitutional History (ClarkNews).
- We missed Temple Law's story on Craig Green and the contribution of history to legal education when it appeared this summer (Temple Law News).
- We don't believe we realized that there is a biennial conference of the Children's History Society.
- The University of Nevada, Las Vegas seeks an Assistant Historian of Indigenous North America.
- Two of the three recipients in Berkeley’s JSP program recently named Berkeley Empirical Legal Studies Graduate Fellows are studying legal history. “Michael Banerjee is researching the legal history of American universities and academic freedom, and Margot Lipin is studying the nexus of legal history, policing, and fashion” (UC Berkeley Law).
- "The University of Northern Iowa's Center for Civic Education has received a $1.22 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education . . . . to strengthen civic education for students statewide. The program will include seminars on civic virtues and Iowa's constitutional history, reaching educators through various formats such as high school teacher seminars, intensive sessions for UNI teaching majors, and workshops for elementary teachers( KWWL).
- The blog Public Law, Policy, and Public Administration blog conveniently gathers links to all the sites you need to keep up to speed with the Supreme Court during its present term. Scroll down to the post dated October 7.
- An essay on the presidents of the Florida State Bar Association from 1907 through 1949 (Florida Bar News).
- Lawbook Exchange's October catalogue of Scholarly Law and Legal History.
- Martti Koskenniemi delivered 2025 Leo Mechelin Keynote Lecture at the Rule of Law Day observance by the University of Helsinki’s Rule of Law Centre and the Leo Mechelin Foundation (ESCLH).
- ICYMI: Twelve Failed Constitutional Amendments That Could Have Reshaped American History (Smithsonian). More Lepore (NPR; CSM; Big Think; Foreign Policy). Steven Calabresi (and Gordon Wood) Akhil Reed Amar's Born Equal (Volokh Conspiracy). Justice Anthony Kennedy on the Origins of "Equal Justice under Law" (NYT). "The Pendle witch trials will haunt [Lancashire's] past forever (LancsLive). Chattanooga layers mourned the death, in 1908, of Judge Charles Dickens Clark (Chattanooga Times Free Press).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.