- Over at the LPEBlog: an interview by Veena Dubal (University of California, Irvine) with Aziza Ahmed (Boston University) on her new book Risk and Resistance: How Feminists Transformed the Law and Science of AIDS (Cambridge University Press).
- From In Custodia Legis: "David Hoffman: Early America’s Dark Horse Law Professor and the Natural Law."
- From the New York Amsterdam News: "The Legal Aid Society marks 150 years with new exhibit" -- noting upcoming programming at the New York Historical. The NYT story is here.
- "Read an exciting article on the legal history of Britain or the British empire published in 2025? Consider nominating the article to the ASLH Sutherland Prize for 'the best article on the legal history of Britain and/or the British Empire published in the previous year.' Self-nominations are also accepted. The deadline is June 1" (H-Law).
- ICYMI: Keith Whittington on the Historic Case for Birthright Citizenship (Dispatch). Hettie V. Williams on Black Women and the Brown Decision (Black Perspectives). The California Judicial Center Library celebrates the "impactful women" of the state's legal history (EIN Presswire). Julie Suk on the Declaration of Independence at 250 (Fordham Law News). On that reunion of the descendants of the litigants in Plessy v. Ferguson (Tulane Law). Rachel F. Seidman on Women Who Changed the Laws Shaping Economic Independence (Smithsonian). The Unique Protections of the Pennsylvania Constitution (JDSupra).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.