- Katrina Jagodinsky, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, will be addressing the Department ofHistory and School of Law at the University of Oregon on May 19, from 3:30-5:00 on "Petitioning for Freedom: Habeas Corpus in the American West, 1812-1924," based on her Mellon-funded, NSF supported digital initiative on U.S. Law and Race.
- We have two reports of Maggie Blackhawk's discussion at Dartmouth College on May 6 of "the centrality of American colonialism and Native American history to legal understandings of the United States Constitution (The Dartmouth; Dartmouth News).
- Lucy Salyer, University of New Hampshire, explains Wong Kim Ark and birthright citizenship on NBC News' "Here's the Scoop" (YouTube).
- Rebecca Tushnet's 2025 Nies Lecture on Intellectual Property at Marquette Law School, entitled “History and Tradition in First Amendment Intellectual Property Cases” is here.
- That symposium over at Balkinization on Stephen Skowronek's The Adaptability Paradox is now complete and is available here.
- More on the litigation over the executive order curtailing the Presidential Records Act: Jonathan Shaub scores the government lawyers who defended the executive order (Lawfare). The American Historical Association explains a recent hearing in the dispute.
- Michael C. Blumm, Lewis and Clark Law School, has posted the preface, table of contents, and first chapter of the second edition of his West Nutshell, A Brief American Legal History, which surveys "American legal history from the Colonial Era to the Trump administration, including an extensive chapter on the first six months of the second Trump administration."
- John O. McGinnis reviews The Making and Breaking of the American Constitution: A Thousand-Year History by Mark Peterson (Law & Liberty).
- ICYMI: Florida’s new history course whitewashes the founders on slavery (Salon)
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.
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