Legal History Blog
scholarship, news and new ideas in legal history
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
LHR 44:1
Bringing the Law and the Local Back In to the Revolution
Sarah Barringer Gordon
The Tension between Religious Liberty and Religious Establishment in Revolutionary New England
Mark Valeri
“They Are Their Citizens and Must Submit to Their Government”: Citizenship and the Creation of the Federal Government, 1776–1787
Jessica Choppin Roney
Popular Government and the Limits of the Law at the Outset of the American Revolution
Donald F. Johnson
Legislation, Regulation, and Administration in the American Revolution
William J. Novak
Review Essay
Something Else: History, Legal Imagination, and the American Revolution
Matthew Crow
Ackerman on the Democratic Basis of Humphrey's Executor
Bruce Ackerman, Yale Law School, has posted Barrett’s Red Flag: Why the Court Should Order Re-argument in Trump v. Slaughter:
While there are a host of essays dealing with the Slaughter and Cox cases presently under consideration by the Supreme Court, this is the first one exploring a fundamental point about Humphrey’s Executor that was advanced by Justice Amy Coney Barrett in her remarkable interventions during December’s oral argument in Slaughter. She emphasized that, in gaining unanimous support for Humphrey’s Executor in 1935, Justice Sutherland was building on the successful construction of a series of independent agencies by both Democratic and Republican Administrations over the preceding half-century -- beginning with Grover Cleveland’s breakthrough success in gaining Congressional approval for the nation’s first independent agency: the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1887. As Justice Barrett pointed out, Cleveland’s presidential successors built on his landmark precedent to gain repeated Congressional support for a wide range for agencies that continue to play a crucial role in today’s America – including the Pure Food and Drug Administration (Theodore Roosevelt), the Federal Trade Commission (Woodrow Wilson), and the Federal Communications Commission (Calvin Coolidge). Since Democratic and Republican Administrations profoundly disagreed on a host of other fundamental issues, their repeated and bipartisan affirmation of expert agencies as a “fourth branch of government” was even more remarkable.
William E. Humphrey (LC)
As a consequence, Justice Barrett suggested that this bipartisan consensus provided a distinctively democratic foundation for Justice Sutherland’s unanimous opinion in Humphrey’s Executor. After all, it was announced in March of 1935 when Sutherland was refusing leading his six Lochnerians in an escalating constitutional assault on the activist regulatory state – despite the eloquent dissents of Brandeis, Cardozo and Stone. Nevertheless, these bitter disagreements did not lead the Lochnerians to challenge the legitimacy of wide-ranging regulation of the market-economy by independent agencies – since American voters had repeatedly vindicated a bipartisan effort to create independent agencies with the requisite expertise required to confront the scientific and industrial revolutions in a responsibly democratic fashion.
Justice Barrett made these points during the give-and-take of oral argument in the Slaughter case. Unfortunately, however, the lawyers for Rebecca Slaughter and Donald Trump were not prepared to respond with sophisticated analysis of the constitutional significance of the half-century of history that she was emphasizing.
It happens, however, that I have spent a great deal of time exploring these issues in preparation for my multivolume series, We the People – and believe that it powerfully supports Justice Barrett’s interpretation of its constitutional significance. To be sure, I expect this essay to provoke serious critiques, as well as significant elaborations, of the themes I present. Indeed, this is precisely why I believe that the Court should defer its final decision in Slaughter and Cox so as to give it the opportunity to make a genuinely thoughtful decision on an issue which will profoundly shape the course of American government for generations.
--Dan Ernst
Monday, March 23, 2026
Wells on the Origins of the Limited Liability Partnership
Harwell Wells, Temple University James E. Beasley School of Law, has posted The Unexpected Origins of the US Limited Liability Partnershi:
This paper tells the origins of the Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) in the United States. Its origins are seemingly well-known; the LLP was created as a response to staggering malpractice claims arising in the 1980s that pushed partners in large American law firms, almost all organised as general partnerships, to seek a shield from personal liability for their firms' or fellow partners' debts. But that account is incomplete. The LLP's origins lie at the end of a much longer story, that of American lawyers' stiff resistance to corporations practicing law. Since the beginning of the twentieth century the legal profession had labored to protect lawyers' self-image and fend off competition by (among other things) forbidding corporations from offering legal services; the LLP appeared when lawyers decided that, despite this longstanding opposition, they needed one of the advantages of incorporation: limited liability. The LLP was thus the product not only of economic demands, but of the peculiarities of the American legal profession and its conflicted relationship with the corporate form and the modern corporation.
--Dan Ernst
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Weekend Roundup
- The Asian Legal History Association has hosted its official launch in Hong Kong (The Standard). The speech of the Secretary for Justice, Paul Lam, at the launch is here. Update: Donal Coffey was there, too.
- Ian Mansfield's review of the exhibition, Londoners on Trial: Crime, Courts and the Public 1244-1924, at the London Archives until February 25, 2027.
- From the Conversation: "The deaf blacksmith who married in 1576 – and the history of sign as a legal language."
- Over at JOTWELL: Blake Emerson (UCLA Law) has posted an admiring review of Nathaniel Donahue's "Officers at Common Law," which is forthcoming in the Yale Law Journal.
- Ashley Everson on Pauli Murray, the Brown Decision, and the Struggle for Equal Rights (Black Perspectives).
- A notice of Akhil Reed Amar's Giannella lecture at Villanova on Born Equal: Remaking America’s Constitution, 1840–1920 (Villanovan).
- Five Takeaways from conference on Richard Primus’s The Oldest Constitutional Question (Michigan Law).
- Now online: the website of the 14th Amendment Center for Law and Democracy at Howard Law School, led by Sherrilyn Ifill.
- ICYMI: Birthright Citizenship Edition. Dahlia Lithwick spoke to Anna O. Law about Law's book, Migration and the Origins of American Citizenship (Amicus). Ilya Somin on Slavery and Birthright Citizenship (Lawfare). Smita Ghosh on Lynch v. Clarke (1844), the birthright citizenship case you never heard of (Slate). Akhil and Vikram Amar and Jason Mazzone on why why the text, history, and structure of a landmark 1952 statute doom Trump’s executive order (SCOTUSblog).
- ICYMI: Orin S. Kerr on How AI Tools Can Help With Legal History Research (Volokh Conspiracy). "The Trump administration’s campaign to remove National Park Service exhibits that 'inappropriately disparage' historical figures" has bogged down (Politico).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.
Friday, March 20, 2026
Engstrom et al. on Managerial Courts
David Freeman Engstrom, David Marcus and Elliot Setzer have published Managerial Courts in the Yale Law Journal:
In recent decades, American courts have undergone a quiet but far-reaching revolution in their function and role. Particularly in state courts facing a crush of cases in high-volume dockets for debt, eviction, and family-law matters, case-by-case judging has gradually given way to court-devised systems that govern adjudication through centralized, routinized, and often digital and data-driven practices. Cases are triaged into differentiated procedural pathways; docket calendars are engineered to shape litigant behavior; decisional aids, digital dashboards, and order templates channel the discretion exercised by judges and staff; teams of quasi-judicial officers, staff attorneys, case-management professionals, and clerks absorb tasks once thought quintessentially judicial in order to ration scarce “judicial attention”; and internal and, increasingly, digitized and even AI-based tools perform quality-control tasks once left exclusively to appellate review. The upshot is that courts pervasively mix adjudication and bureaucracy, with profound but largely unexamined implications for fair and accurate adjudication, access to justice, due process, and the production of law.
This Feature surveys the managerial turn transforming American courts, tracing its roots, forms, and normative implications. An opening historical narrative situates the rise of court managerialism within a century-long arc from the New Deal to the digital age, highlighting its shifting causes and its consequences for American justice. Turning to the present, we offer a novel taxonomy of current managerial techniques that identifies the operational components of the managerial turn and synthesizes their many commonalities and interconnections. Finally, our normative and doctrinal analysis develops principles for reconciling court managerialism with classical conceptions of American courts and judges as passive, neutral adjudicators of whatever the adversarial process serves up. Can courts adopt bureaucratic tools without losing their distinctive institutional identity? Given twenty-first-century litigation realities, including the bracing fact that the majority of cases in the American civil-justice system now pit represented parties against unrepresented ones, managerial approaches will often outperform an unmediated adversary process on metrics of accuracy and efficiency. A constitutional reckoning awaits: while some parts of the new managerialism may run afoul of due process, others may be constitutionally required.
--Dan Ernst
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Schonthal's "Courts, Constitutions and Karma"
Benjamin Schonthal, University of Otago, has published Courts, Constitutions and Karma
Buddhism, Law and the Practices of Legal Pluralism in Sri Lanka (Cambridge University Press). It appears in Cambridge Studies in Law and Society, a series edited by Mark Fathi Massoud, University of California, Santa Cruz, and Jens Meierhenrich, London School of Economics and Political Science:
Although rarely acknowledged, Buddhist monastics are among the most active lawmakers and jurists in Asia, operating sophisticated networks of courts and constitutions while also navigating—and shaping—secular legal systems. This book provides the first in-depth study of Buddhist monastic law and its entanglements with state law in Sri Lanka from 1800 to the present. Rather than a top-down account of colliding legal orders, Schonthal draws on nearly a decade of archival, ethnographic and empirical research to document the ways that Buddhist monks, colonial officials and contemporary lawmakers reconcile the laws of the Buddha and the laws of the land using practices of legal pluralism. Comparative in outlook and accessible in style, this book not only offers a portrait of Buddhist monastic law in action, it also yields new insights into how societies manage multi-legality and why legal pluralism leads to conflict in some settings and to compromise in others.
--Dan Ernst
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Law's "Migration and the Origins of American Citizenship"
The official date is still about a week hence, but because the book is already getting noticed in social media, we’ll note now the imminent publication of Anna O. Law’s Migration and the Origins of American Citizenship: African Americans, Native Americans, and Immigrants (Oxford University Press):
Since the late nineteenth century, the US federal government has enjoyed exclusive authority to decide whether someone has the ability to enter and stay in US territory. But freedom of movement was not guaranteed in the British colonies or early US. By contrast, voluntary migrants were met with strict laws and policies created by colonies and states, which denied free mobility and settlement in their territories to unwanted populations.
Migration and the Origins of American Citizenship presents a story of constitutional development that traces the confluence of the logics of slavery and settler colonialism in early legal rulings and public policy about migration and citizenship. The book examines the division of labor between the national and state governments that endured for over a century, reasons why that arrangement changed in the late nineteenth century, and what the transformation meant for people subject to those regimes of control. Drawing into one study the migration policy histories of groups of people that are usually studied separately, and combining the methodologies of political science, history, and law, Anna O. Law reveals the unmistakable effects of slavery and Native American dispossession in modern US immigration policy.
--Dan Ernst
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
The Witte Backlist
John Witte, Jr., Emory University School of Law, an eminent historian of law and religion, has posted a number of his papers, most (but not all) of which are brief: Church, State, and Marriage: Three Reformation Models; The Tradition of Traditional Marriage; Religious Liberty (Foundations); the preface to To Have and to Hold: Marrying and its Documentation in Western Christendom, 400-1600, edited by Philip L. Reynolds and John Witte, Jr. (2007); Protestant Law; Christianity and Law in the Enlightenment; Josef Bohatec: The First Historian of the Calvinist Reformation of Rights; the introduction to Christianity and Democracy in Global Context, edited by John Witte, Jr. (1993); and Johannes Althusius and the Universal Rule of Natural Laws and Rights.
--Dan Ernst
Monday, March 16, 2026
Mark on Emergencies and Civil Disobelience in Israel, 1948-1954
Maya Mark has published Civil Disobedience in Defense of Democracy: Menachem Begin's Struggle Against Emergency Laws in Israel, 1948–1954 in Law and History Review:
This study uncovers a previously overlooked chapter in the historiography of civil disobedience: Menachem Begin’s resistance to Israeli emergency legislation between 1948 and 1954, which he argued undermined foundational democratic principles. It presents the first scholarly analysis of Begin’s resistance, contending that it constitutes a clear instance of civil disobedience, embodying its core tenets. At the heart of this historical case study lies a paradigmatic question: how can laws that erode foundational—yet abstract—democratic principles, such as the separation of powers, be effectively resisted, and can such resistance be accommodated within traditional frameworks of civil disobedience? Begin’s struggle brings these questions into sharp relief, illuminating longstanding critiques of the framework’s overly restrictive boundaries and underscoring the tension between theoretical frameworks and political reality. More broadly, the article engages central debates at the intersection of law, politics, and democratic thought. By examining the democratic convictions of a prominent right-wing leader, it contributes to historical scholarship on the role of conservative and right-wing movements in shaping democratic ideologies, while also providing a historical reference point for subsequent ideological transformations and radicalization processes within these movements. Finally, by illuminating the complexities inherent in opposing laws that erode core-yet abstract-democratic principles, this study resonates with contemporary debates on democratic backsliding, offering a historical lens through which civil disobedience has served as a principled response to such challenges.
--Dan Ernst
Birnhack on Patents in Mandate Palestine
Michael Birnhack, Tel Aviv University Buchmann Faculty of Law, has posted Colonial Patents: Industrial Property Law and Nationality in Mandate Palestine, which is forthcoming in the Journal of Legal History:
This Article offers the first historical analysis of patent law in British Mandate Palestine (1917-1948), examining 4,395 patent applications through a reconstructed registry and archival sources. It develops Colonial Patents as a framework for analysing legal transplantation in colonial contexts.
The analysis reveals Britain's hybrid imperial patent policy: rejecting empire-wide unification while creating preferential procedures for British patents. Palestine's 1924 Patent Ordinance emerged from London-Jerusalem negotiations, including London's rejected proposal to abolish local patents. The registry shows profound participation asymmetries: while foreign and local inventors each filed approximately half of applications, Jewish inventors comprised nearly all local applicants, with scant Arab Palestinians filings. Archival sources confirm British engagement with Jewish patent agents but no Arab involvement. This disparity reflects patent law's ideological foundations in Enlightenment progress and industrial capitalism, which resonated with European-educated Jewish immigrants but remained peripheral to Arab Palestinian society, demonstrating how nominally neutral colonial institutions operated differentially.
--Dan Ernst
Saturday, March 14, 2026
Weekend Roundup
- A head's up to those thinking about submitting proposals for the annual meeting of the American Society for Legal History in Banff, November 12-14: the deadline is March 24.
- This year's Bancroft Prizes have gone to two works of legal history: Emilie Connolly’s Vested Interests: Trusteeship and Native Dispossession in the United States and Beth Lew-Williams’s John Doe Chinaman: A Forgotten History of Chinese Life Under American Racial Law (NYT).
- Legal history bulks large among the finalists for the book division of the American Bar Association’s Silver Gavel Awards for Media and the Arts: The Zorg: A Tale of Greed and Murder that Inspired the Abolition of Slavery, by Siddharth Kara; The Radical Fund: How a Band of Visionaries and a Million Dollars Upended America, by John Fabian Witt; We The People: A History of the U.S. Constitution, by Jill Lepore; You Can't Kill a Man Because of the Books He Reads: Angelo Herndon's Fight for Free Speech, by Brad Snyder; American Scare: Florida's Cold War on Black and Queer Lives, by Robert Fieseler; and The Containment: Detroit, the Supreme Court, and the Battle for Racial Justice in the North, by Michelle Adams.
- The Irish Legal History Society has announced its 2026 essay prize. "Submissions are invited by 31 May on any topic within Irish legal history, broadly conceived, from both undergraduates and postgraduates."
- The latest two volumes in the Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise History of the Supreme Court of the United States, The Taft Court: Making Law for a Divided Nation, 1921–1930, by Robert C. Post, Yale Law School, and The Hughes Court: From Progressivism to Pluralism, 1930 to 1941, by Mark V. Tushnet, Harvard Law School, are now available as paperbacks from Cambridge University Press.
- The U.S. Department of Justice has announced that a museum devoted to its past will open in July 2026.
- Anna Snyder on the "odd omission" of lawyers in commemorations of the 250th anniversary of independence (AHA Perspectives).
- A notice of Maria Fletcher, Charlie Peevers, and Seonaid Stevenson-McCabe's chapter on "Madge Easton Anderson, the first woman in Scotland and the UK to become a professional lawyer," in Celebrating Women in Legal History: Making and Shaping a Discipline (Scottish Legal News).
- "The 1957 executive order signed by President Dwight Eisenhower to enforce the desegregation of Little Rock Central High School is one of the documents on display at the Clinton Presidential Center at a new exhibit chronicling the history of the 27 amendments to the Constitution" (Arkansas Advocate).
- Michele Goodwin’s Presidential Address to the Law & Society Association prompted June Carbone to reflect on teaching Johnson v. McIntosh and Dred Scott in the comment Claiming History.
- A Harvard Law Review note: Making the Rules of the Rules of the Game: The Use, Misuse, and Disuse of the Rulemaking Grant in the Act of 1842.
- Robert L. Tsai reviews Cliff Sloan's The Court at War (Washington Monthly).
- Lawbook Exchange's March catalogue of Scholarly Law and Legal History.
- ICYMI: Phillip W. Magness on Justice Thomas's dissent in the IEEPA decision (Law & Liberty). A notice of Vernon Burton's talk, “The First Amendment and Lincoln’s Constitutional Legacy" at Clemson's "week of celebrating First Amendment rights and history" (Clemson News). Tarun Choudhury on Sir Garfield Barwick (Legal Service India). Ernie Walton thinks that Originalists Need the Classical Legal Tradition (Public Discourse).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.
Friday, March 13, 2026
Borwegen and Mehrotra on the OBBBA's Tax Provisions in Historical Perspective
Amanda Borwegen and Ajay K. Mehrotra, Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law, have posted The Beginnings of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act: Placing the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act in Historical Perspective, which appears in the Cornell Law Review Online:
On July 4, 2025, President Donald J. Trump signed into law the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). This new law was built on the foundations of its immediate predecessor, the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA). This Essay examines the historical roots and contemporary implications of these two laws. It argues that both acts reflect continuities and ruptures in the recent history of U.S. tax law and fiscal policymaking. On the one hand, the two laws are a continuation of decades long trends in American tax policy—trends marked by persistent tax cutting, increasing partisan polarization, and a growing disregard for fiscal responsibility. Yet these two laws also depart from earlier episodes marked by bipartisan efforts to address fiscal challenges through compromise and revenue-conscious reform.
To highlight the continuities and ruptures, the Essay further analyzes three key historical analogs: (1) the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003, (2) the 1990s Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Acts, and (3) the 1983 Greenspan Commission on Social Security Reform. While earlier tax laws established the partisan use of reconciliation and temporary tax relief, the TCJA and OBBBA expanded this model into permanent, deficit financed legislation. In contrast, the Omnibus Acts and Greenspan Commission exemplified bipartisan efforts to address fiscal challenges through compromise and revenue conscious reform.
The goal of this Essay is not to explicate the detailed provisions of the two new laws. Rather, our objective is to provide a broad retrospective look at how we have arrived at this historic and extraordinary moment. The historical trends explored in this Essay suggest that we may be entering a new era of tax law and fiscal policymaking—one defined by ideological entrenchment and legislative expediency rather than bipartisan cooperation and fiscal responsibility. By placing the TCJA in historical perspective, we identify and analyze some of the early beginnings of the OBBBA and other historical analogs, with the hope of better understanding the new law and perhaps future tax and spending legislation.
--Dan Ernst
Siegel on the Originalist Case for Prenatal Personhood
Reva Siegel, Yale Law School, has posted It's Alive! When the Original Meaning of "Person" Protected by the Fourteenth Amendment Is Not a Fixed, But Living Word:
This Article examines an originalist argument for prenatal personhood—that life from conception is included within the original public meaning of the “person” the Fourteenth Amendment protects—advanced by Josh Craddock, the most prominent proponent of the originalist-personhood claim in the years before and after Dobbs. Under the original public meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment, Craddock claims, the “preborn” are persons entitled to due process and equal protection of the laws so that homicide statutes should apply to “preborn” as well as born persons.
The Article begins by evaluating Craddock’s argument for the original public meaning of person on its own terms, and identifies fundamental flaws in the way Craddock uses dictionary evidence and addresses the textual and historical context in which the Fourteenth Amendment employs the term “person.” It then shows that Craddock is reasoning about abortion inside contemporary frameworks and not as nineteenth-century Americans did. (Craddock’s argument employs a language of personhood that opponents of abortion only began using as they entered into struggles over the Constitution in the era of Roe; Craddock draws on “substantive” originalist methods and advances equal-protection arguments about homicide law that opponents of abortion did not advocate until the twenty-first century, in the era of Dobbs
In concluding, the Article situates Craddock among abortion “abolitionists” who support legislation that provides equal protection to unborn persons by applying homicide law to women who obtain abortions and those who assist them. Abolitionists defend their carceral equal-protection arguments by appeal to constitutional memory (e.g. “person,” Lincoln; Frederick Douglass’s North Star) and in openly religious terms.
--Dan Ernst
Schmidt and Funk on the Supreme Court's "Equity Docket"
Thomas P. Schmidt and Kellen Funk, Columbia Law School, have posted The Equity Docket, which is forthcoming in the NYU Law review:
The Supreme Court has two sides. On its ordinary docket, the Court answers questions of law after briefing and oral argument. On its extraordinary docket, the Court fields applications from litigants asking it to equitably set the status of a new law or executive action while a lawsuit is pending. Only a decade ago, the equity side was an obscure backwater of Supreme Court practice; today it is where the Court confronts some of the most contested and consequential public law disputes. This aspect of the Court’s work has taken on various labels—the shadow docket, emergency docket, interim docket, to name a few. This Article proposes the “equity docket.” That term best captures what is distinctive about this growing part of the Court’s business, and helps us to get a normative handle on where the Court has gone right—and wrong.
Any judicial practice grounded in equity will be vulnerable to the charges of arbitrariness and lack of transparency; those critiques are as old as John Selden’s rebuke about the chancellor’s foot. And variants of those critiques have been ubiquitous in discussions of the equity docket. Historically, though, equity was able to reform itself successfully in response to these charges. Our basic contention is that the Court has assumed a far-reaching new form of equitable jurisdiction without also accepting the historical guardrails that both limited and legitimated equity.
The Article makes three contributions. First, it links the emergence of the equity docket to the Court’s broader engagement with the history of federal equity in recent years—what some have called the “new equity.” Second, it argues that the Court has lost sight of important constraints that kept equity in an adjectival position. And finally, it suggests that the Court has impoverished the inputs of equitable decisionmaking by relying almost exclusively on hastily formed predictions about the merits. In place of the Court’s current approach, we propose a model of a more objective, “filtered” conscience, drawn from the history of equity, that would give proper weight to precedent and keep the equity docket from engulfing the Court.
--Dan Ernst
Sobkowski on Trump and Youngstown
Patrick J. Sobkowski, Marquette University, has posted Presidentialism at the Highest Ebb: Executive Power in the Age of Trump, which is forthcoming in the University of Dayton Law Review:
On July 1, 2024, the Supreme Court decided Trump v. United States. In a 6-3 decision, the Court held that presidents are absolutely immune from criminal prosecution for official acts taken pursuant to his “conclusive and preclusive” constitutional powers. Trump represents a watershed moment in the Supreme Court’s separation of powers jurisprudence. Critics worried that the Court’s decision put the president above the law. Because Trump creates a constitutional rule that places the president’s powers above those of Congress, the decision presents an interesting opportunity to contrast it to another famous separation of powers decision.
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer is perhaps the most important separation of powers case the Supreme Court has ever decided. After President Harry Truman decided to seize the nation’s steel mills to avert a labor strike, the Court struck down his executive order as beyond the powers of the president. The Court’s decision in Youngstown stands for the propositions that (1) the president is not above the law, even in national emergencies; and (2) much of the president’s power flows not from implied or inherent constitutional authority, but from statutory authorizations from Congress.
This Article presents the first comprehensive comparative analysis of Trump and Youngstown. A close reading and attention to the historical and political context surrounding both cases reveal both striking similarities and differences. I employ archival evidence to shed light on the arguments presented by the Truman administration in defense of the seizure, as well as public reaction to the decision. The Court’s shift from functionalism to formalism in the period between the two cases also carries important implications for the separation of powers going forward.
--Dan Ernst
Thursday, March 12, 2026
The Decline of Congress: An ICH Seminar
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| US Capitol (NYPL) |
The ICH seminar is convened twice yearly and is designed for “graduate students, junior faculty, and other educators, in history, political science, law, and related disciplines.” There is no tuition. More information about the seminar and how to apply is here.
[A disambiguation note: The Institute for Constitutional History at the New York Historical ought not to be confused with the Institute for Constitutional Studies at GW Law, directed by Maeva Marcus.]
--Dan Ernst
The YJLH Symposium on Gienapp's "Against Constitutional Originalism"
We have previously noted some contributions to the symposium on Jonathan Gienapp’s Against Constitutional Originalism in the Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities. The complete symposium is now available open-access online:
Can Originalism Survive Jonathan Gienapp?
Thomas B. Colby
Gienapp’s Big Book: Conceptual Rupture, Modernism, and the End of Originalism
Logan Sawyer
Birthright Citizenship, Unwritten Constitutionalism, and the Nature of the Union
John Mikhail
Against Against Constitutional Originalism: A Critique of a Critique
Mark Peterson
Essential Fidelities
Lawrence Lessig
The Free Constitution: The Real Genius of the Constitution
Mary Sarah Bilder
The Obsolescence of the Originalism Battles
John Witt
History or Memory?: Claims on the Past in Constitutional Argument Over Originalism, Civil War/Reconstruction, and MAGA
Reva B. Siegel
In the Beginning There Was Positive Law: Section 25, Calder v. Bull, and Constitutional Continuity
Kevin C. Walsh
Historians and Originalists
Cass R. Sunstein
Yes, The Founders Were Originalists
William Baude and Stephen E. Sachs
The Constitution and Historical Rupture
Jonathan Gienapp
An Essay Collection on Work, Capitalism and Democracy Since the New Deal
Work, Capitalism, and Democracy: The United States Since the New Deal, edited by Elizabeth Tandy Shermer, has just been published by the University of Pennsylvania Press:
Changes to the meaning and nature of work, capitalism, and democracy during and after the New Deal have been contested from the mid-twentieth century to the present day. Rather than rehashing the familiar, tidy story of a Democratic coalition coming together in the 1930s only to be felled by conservative movements in the 1970s, this volume instead emphasizes that the prosperity many white American families enjoyed did not stop the fights over whose work would be recognized, how corporations would be regulated, and whose democratic rights would be protected, both on and off the job. Cultural representations of the ideal worker, legal battles over workplace rights, political standoffs over inflation policies, dire warnings against too much regulation, and abuses of the tax code indicate there never really was a consensus on how democratic the country, its economic system, and its workplaces would be.Essays of interest to legal historians include Jean-Christian Vanel, “‘The Nine Judges Have Gone Home’: Liberals, the 1949 “Closed Shop Cases,” and the Undermining of Union Democracy; and Reuel Schiller, “‘The Magnanimity of Disorder’: Counterculture Intellectuals and the Rise of Anti-Statist Thought in Late Twentieth-Century America.”
As the collected essays suggest, backlash does not seem the right word to describe the challenges left-leaning politicians, environmental activists, and immigrants faced in the late twentieth century, when managing supply chains became far more lucrative than manufacturing the goods being shipped around the world. Using the broad categories of work, capitalism, and democracy to reinterrogate the past, contributors contend, is the only way to understand today’s conflicts over the future of how Americans will work, how capitalism will function, and how the country will be governed.
--Dan Ernst
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Bauer to Lecture on Reparations for Victims of Brazil's Dictatorship
Nos complace informaros de la celebración del próximo Coloquio de Historia del Derecho de la UAM. En esta ocasión contaremos con la presencia de la profesora Caroline Silveira Bauer, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, que nos hablará de “Las posibilidades de reparación de crÃmenes cometidos por empresas y particulares durante la dictadura de 1964 en Brasil.” [“The possibilities of reparation for crimes committed by companies and individuals during the 1964 dictatorship in Brazil.”] Adjunto a este correo se puede encontrar un resumen de su propuesta, junto con la programación prevista para este ciclo de Coloquios.
El encuentro se celebrará el próximo viernes 13 de marzo, a las 11:30 h, en el seminario VI de la cuarta planta de la Facultad de Derecho. Asimismo, también se podrá seguir a través del siguiente enlace: Coloquios HD | UAM | Reunión-Unirse | Microsoft Teams.
Tycko's "Captured Consent"
Sonia Tycko, Lecturer in History in the School of History, Classics and Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh, has published Captured Consent: Contract Labor in English Charity, Colonization, and War, 1600–1700 (Cambridge University Press). It appears in the series Studies in Legal History, sponsored by the American Society for Legal History:
Consent has been celebrated as a guarantor of liberty and self-determination; however, its history suggests a different meaning. In this book, Sonia Tycko reconstructs the coercive role of contracts in early modern English labor. The long-term, long-distance, and high-risk nature of pauper apprenticeships, transatlantic indentured servitude, military conscription, and prisoner of war labor drove some English people to develop consent into a tool of labor coercion. Coercion could constitute valid consent for people whose social position, age, and gender fit the profile of natural laborers. Many subordinates experienced consenting – or the presumption of their consent – as a form of acceptance of, or even submission to, their position. This book reveals that early modern labor was one of the fields in which ideas of freedom of contract, voluntariness, and enticement developed.
--Dan Ernst
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Kessler on Separation of Powers and the Draft
Jeremy Kessler, Columbia Law School, has posted Selective Service and the Separation of Powers, which is forthcoming in the Boston University Law Review:
This Response argues that the secularization of conscientious objection during the Vietnam War is part of a larger and longer-running story. That story is about pacifists and draft resisters, but it is also about how the military draft destabilized the separation of powers, leading the federal judiciary to encroach upon congressional and administrative authority while fracturing the executive branch. The primary legal weapon deployed in these inter- and intra-branch conflicts was creative statutory interpretation. Congress rarely codified winning interpretations because congressional majorities usually opposed them. Accordingly, the statutory text itself -- whether in 1948, 1956, 1967, or today -- tells us little about how the federal justice system regulated the draft in light of that system's “underlying concepts of procedural regularity and basic fair play.”
If a future Congress heeds Professor William Aceves’s call to codify judicial recognition of secular conscientious objection, it should thus take the opportunity to confront a more basic question: whether the Military Selective Service Act as written is consistent with contemporary concepts of “procedural regularity and basic fair play.” The answer to this question is likely "no," precisely because those concepts are consistent with -- and at times directly indebted to -- the norms elaborated by judicial and executive critics of draft administration. Yet to amend the draft law to reflect those critics' favored norms might frustrate any future war fought with drafted soldiers. As this Response shows, the legal preferences of federal judges and Justice Department officials played a significant, and perhaps determinative, role in the erosion of the draft’s capacity and legitimacy between WWII and Vietnam.
Today, appalling casualty rates in Ukraine have led some factions of the military and national security bureaucracy to conclude that the outcome of any prolonged military conflict with Russia, China, or even, perhaps, Iran will depend on drafted soldiers. Whether such a conflict – or the interpretive methods used to adjudicate resistance to it – would break the historical pattern of official draft resistance is an open question. But the fate of both secular conscientious objectors and the Selective Service System as a whole will depend on the answer.
--Dan Ernst
Murray on Judicial Review for Error of Fact
Contemporary English administrative law has got itself in a mess over the distinction between
errors of law (generally reviewable) and errors of fact (generally not renewable). Perhaps the low point came in R (Jones) v First-tier Tribunal [2013] 2 AC 48, where the Supreme Court suggested the distinction between the two types of error can be manipulated by the courts to control the availability of judicial review. As such, a factual finding made by an administrator has become a version of the famous duck-rabbit illusion: whether a court sees an error of law or error of fact depends on its psychological predisposition to review.
Looking back over the early history of English administrative law, the courts seemed to have less of a problem in review for error of fact. Whether an error made by an administrator was of law or of fact didn’t really matter that much. The key issue was what the significance of that error was to the decision-maker’s power to act.
At a time when legal historians and contemporary public law scholars are increasingly turning to the history of administrative law as a site for productive study, this paper seeks to review the history of error of fact review from the middle of 17th century through to the early part of the 20th century. It will chart developments in the jurisprudence of the Court of King’s Bench when reviewing factual errors under the prerogative writs, especially certiorari and prohibition, and try to identify what really led to modern law’s confusion over error of fact review.
--Dan Ernst
Monday, March 9, 2026
Davies on Pollock's Humor
Ross E. Davies, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School, has posted A Wig Without a Home: The Comedic Wisdom of Sir Frederick Pollock, which appeared in the Green Bag 2d:
Frederick Pollock (1845-1937) was the Green Bag’s kind of scholar. The first half of this paper consists of a sketch of his career and character, followed by a closer look at his sense of humor and the roles it played in his work. The second half of the paper is in two sections. First, there is a full republication of the text of a tiny book — a short story by Pollock titled “Queen Titania’s Chancellor”— that for nearly a century sat unnoticed on a bookshelf in the library of the Queen’s Dolls’ at Windsor Castle, until Elizabeth Clark Ashby (Curator of Books and Manuscripts in the Royal Library at Windsor Castle) gave Pollock’s miniature masterpiece some long-overdue and well-deserved attention in her 2024 book (full-sized), “The Miniature Library of Queen Mary’s Dolls’ House.” Second, there is a close (but incomplete) reading and analysis of that tiny text. If there are any lessons to be drawn from this paper, perhaps they are that greatness need not always be cloaked in dignity, and that Jack Point was not the only wit who could “teach you with a quip, if I’ve a mind” or “trick you into learning with a laugh.”
--Dan Ernst
A Special Issue on Legal Humor
[We have the following CFP. DRE]
Touro Law Review: Special Issue on Legal Humor
Are you funny? Were you the life of the party in law school? Do you make your faculty colleagues or law firm partners laugh out loud? The Touro Law Review is planning a special issue on "Legal Humor" and seeks your work.
We are looking for short pieces (maximum of 10 pages double-spaced) that take a humorous look at any aspect of the law, including law schools, the practice of law, or the courts.
Pieces can take any form, including descriptive, expository, narrative, or technical. Poetry, screen writing, song writing, and other forms of creative writing are welcome as well.
Law professors, lawyers, judges, and current law students are eligible to participate. Non-lawyers also are welcome to submit their work.
Pieces are due by Tuesday, September 1, 2026, and should be e-mailed as a Word attachment to all three of the issue's Faculty Coordinators:
Associate Dean Rodger D. Citron (Touro University): rcitron@touro.edu
Professor Rena C. Seplowitz (Touro University): rseplowi@touro.edu
Professor Robert M. Jarvis (Nova Southeastern University): jarvisb@nova.edu
The Faculty Coordinators will review all pieces that are submitted by the deadline. Acceptance decisions will be sent out on or before December 1, 2026.
It is expected that the accepted works will appear in Volume 41, Issue 5 of the Touro Law Review, which currently is set to be released by July 1, 2027.
Please keep in mind: All pieces will be judged on their originality, novelty, and general appeal to a legal audience. Previously published pieces will not be accepted. Pieces that seriously examine the use of humor in legal matters or proceedings also will not be accepted. Only legal humor pieces will be considered.
Questions? Please e-mail the Faculty Coordinators at the e-mail addresses listed above. We look forward to laughing at your work!
[Um: Was that "at" or "with"? Possibly both? DRE]
Allison Tirres to Co-Edit AJLH
--Dan Ernst
Sunday, March 8, 2026
MPI Seeks a Doctoral Student
[We have the following announcement. DRE.]
The Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory in Frankfurt/Main is a world leading research institute with a staff of more than 150. Its three departments with more than 70 scholars, the unrivalled collections of its specialized library and its numerous national and international co-operations make it the central research hub for a global scientific community investigating the past, present and future of legal regimes.We are looking to recruit as of 1 November 2026 one Doctoral Student (m/f/d) for the DFG Research
Training Group "Organizing Architectures¨. The DFG Research Training Group "Organising Architectures" (3022), in which the Goethe University Frankfurt/Main, the Technical University of Darmstadt, the University of Kassel and our institute are involved, focuses on architecture as the organized, collective shaping of modern societies through institutions, networks and discourses. This focus is based on the assumption that observation of social orders cannot b e separated from architectural formations and that these, like the respective architectures, arise through specific, complex social negotiation processes. A detailed description of the graduate school and more detailed information on pplications can be found [here].
We are also offering an online information event where we will present the research concept, the study program and the future working methods of the college, and will of course be available to answer any questions. Registration is not required. The link to participate can be found on the website mentioned above.
Your profile. We welcome applications that demonstrate a serious interest in legal history or in a historical discipline that addresses questions of normativity, as well as a willingness to combine this with the thematic fields ofarchitecture and urban planning.
We expect a qualified, above-average university degree in law or history. Additionally, we expect a willingness to work in an interdisciplinary manner and ideally initial experience in this, the ability, eagerness and readiness to work in a team, presence at Frankfurt and good German or English skills, as well as the willingness to learn the other language.
Our offer. You will have unlimited access to our world leading library and a multitude of databases. You will be provided with a work space and will receive extensive academic and administrative support. There are generous grants for research trips to archives and libraries, as well as for attending conferences. A variety of personal and career development opportunities is available, including funding for German language classes. We offer an attractive and international work environment with an unparalleled research infrastructure and a good working atmosphere. The job is a full time position (currently 39 hours per week). While you will be based in Frankfurt/Main. The payment is currently £Ã¡3,185.72 per month (gross) in the first year, which equals approximately £Ã¡2,163 after taxes in the first year and £Ã¡2,301 in the second year, depending on family circumstances, plus a special annual payment.. The position is a fixed-term appointment for three years, with the possibility of renewal for a further year.
We welcome all applications, regardless of nationality, ethnic and social background, religion
and age. We are striving to increase the proportion of female researchers and staff and therefore particularly encourage women to apply. Severely disabled people with the same abilities and qualifications will be given priority. The college also offers support in balancing family and work; there are generous opportunities for mobile working (at present, up to 40 per cent per month). Due to the collaborative nature of the interdisciplinary group, active participation in the qualification and study programme of the research training group is expected.
Application procedure. Please submit the following application documents in German or English:
- A cover letter explaining your motivation for pursuing a doctorate in the Research Training Group, stating in which of the participating disciplines you are pursing your doctorate;
- CV with information on your course of study and language skills and your academic certificates (scanned).
Please also submit a separate, anonymized file (max. 1 MB) containing a detailed research expose of a maximum of 3 pages plus a bibliography for a doctoral project taking into account the academic program of the Research Training Group. Please indicate here in which supervisor(s) from among the Principal Investigators of the Research Training Group you prefer. Your application must be submitted online via our application form by the closing date of 7 April 2026. The selection interviews will take place in the beginning of June 2026.
Contact. Informal enquiries may be directed to PD Dr. Peter Collin (collin@lhlt.mpg.de) or - as far as it generally concerns the activities of the Research Training Group ¡V to the coordinator of the research training group, Friederike Weidner (f.weidner@kunst.uni-frankfurt.de). For questions as to the terms and conditions of employment please contact Anna Heym (jobs@lhlt.mpg.de).
US Legal History VAP at University of Florida
The Department of History at the University of Florida, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, invites applications for a full-time, time-limited, nine-month, non-tenure-accruing position at the rank of Visiting Assistant Professor, beginning August 16, 2026, in United States legal history.
The successful candidate will teach five courses during the academic year, and should be able to contribute to the Department of History’s intellectual growth and emphasis upon interdisciplinary and collaborative research. The salary is competitive and commensurate with qualifications and experience, and the compensation includes a full benefits package. UF offers a strong benefits package for eligible faculty appointments, including health insurance, paid leave (as applicable), and retirement options....
Applicants should have completed a Ph.D. in History by August 15, 2026. We have a preference for candidates whose scholarship and teaching emphasize 19th and/or 20th century US history. The successful candidate will be expected to demonstrate a strong commitment to teaching a diverse body of undergraduate and graduate students in Gainesville, Florida. For full consideration, applications must be submitted online: Details - Visiting Assistant Professor, US Legal History
A complete application includes:
- Letter of application summarizing the applicant's qualifications, interests, and suitability for the position
- A statement on teaching goals
- A complete curriculum vitae
- Names and contact information for three professional references
Application must be submitted by 11:55 p.m. (ET) of the posting end date. Review of applications will begin on March 24, 2026 and will continue until a successful applicant is selected.
All candidates for employment are subject to a pre-employment screening which includes a review of criminal records, reference checks, and verification of education.
The selected candidate will be required to provide an official transcript to the hiring department upon hire. A transcript will not be considered “official” if a designation of “Issued to Student” is visible. Degrees earned from an educational institution outside of the United States require evaluation by a professional credentialing service provider approved by the National Association of Credential Evaluation Services (NACES), which can be found [here].
Contact Information: Professor Ben Wise, benwise@ufl.edu
Saturday, March 7, 2026
Weekend Roundup
- 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.
Friday, March 6, 2026
Cannan on the King of the Treatise Writers
John Cannan, Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law, on Joel Bishop's Reign as King of the Treatise Writers and What it Means for Persuasive Authority:
What does this say about law practice and legal education, which has long embraced and professed a perception of persuasive authority, mostly ruled by a rigid source hierarchy, that does not work and likely never did? Recently, there have been challenges to this status quo. The most comprehensive was made by Professor Amy Griffin in her article, Dethroning the Hierarchy of Authority, in which she demonstrated the necessity for a new understanding of persuasive authority and how to go about making one. This paper buttresses and strengthens her arguments by examining a persuasive authority case study-an authoritative biography, or rather a biography of the authority of Joel Prentiss Bishop, one of the greatest treatise writers of the 19th century. This biography is a concrete example to bolster Griffin's critique that persuasive authority is a vast and shifting field, with multiple influences and impacts that must be described in a new and more flexible way. The course of this article is as follows. First, it describes the nature and current understanding of persuasive authority and Griffin's challenge to the existing order. Griffin's call for a more pluralistic framework is combined with the observations of librarian and philosopher Patrick Wilson to suggest a means to better understand persuasive authority. Parts II-IV tell the history of Bishop's rise as a treatise writer and authority; the slow decline of his authoritative status after his death; and his recent resurrection as an authority, primarily by the United States Supreme Court. Part V demonstrates how Bishop's history as an authority supports Griffin's imperative for a new understanding of persuasive authority, especially as legal research and practice are increasingly influenced by new artificial intelligence (AI) tools.
Joel Prentiss Bishop (wiki)
--Dan Ernst
Leshem on Ships as Legal Persons
Ela A. Leshem, Fordham University School of Law, has posted Normative Transplants: The Case of Ships as Legal Persons, which is forthcoming in Legal Personhood in Private Law, edited by Paul B. Miller, Christopher Essert and Eva Micheler (Cambridge University Press 2026):
What does the legal personhood of ships contribute to theories of legal persons? Ships became legal persons in U.S. law through a process of “normative transplantation.” I coin this term to describe the migration of concepts between normative orders. In the case of ships, the conception that they are persons migrated from the normative order of aesthetics to that of law. When U.S. judges in the nineteenth century developed the doctrine of ships’ legal personality, they drew on longstanding personifications of ships in literature and culture. Influential judges in the twentieth century also traced the origin of ships’ legal personality to a migration from the normative order of religion.
(credit)
This account of ships’ legal personality as a normative transplant is significant for theories of legal personhood in ways that apply both to past legal persons, like humans and corporations, and to potential future legal persons, like animals, parts of nature, and AI systems. First, the account reveals that artificial legal persons created for instrumental reasons, such as ships and corporations, can—like natural persons—have normative and ontological grounding outside of law. Second, the account shows that calling an entity’s legal personhood “fictional” amounts to a normative and not just a descriptive claim. Finally, the account encourages legal theorists to see that key concepts—such as personhood—migrate between law and a broad range of normative orders, including morality, aesthetics, and religion.
--Dan Ernst
Thursday, March 5, 2026
Aikin on US v. Neeley
Joshua Aiken, American Bar Foundation Doctoral Fellow in Law & Inequality, has posted She Had Slain Her Favorite: Race, Gender, Violence, and the Rule of Law in the Military-Occupied South:
This Article excavates the 1865 trial United States v. Temperance Neely to analyze how emergent legal cultures in the military-occupied South calcified racial slavery's logic despite formal emancipation. Through examination of previously unanalyzed court proceedings, I demonstrate how this case illuminates three interlocking dimensions of postbellum jurisprudence: legal systems simultaneously acknowledged Black life while preserving white authority through plantation logics that naturalized Black women's subordination; violence against Black women and extraction of their labor became integral to reproducing social conditions necessary for racial-economic order; and Black witnesses' testimonies, though formally admitted, revealed systemic patterns that rendered Black women's experiences unintelligible within emergent legal frameworks. Drawing on the theoretical insights of Anthony Paul Farley, Saidiya Hartman, and Hortense Spillers, I observe the persistence of 'white-over-black' ideology through an "American grammar" of formal equality, liberal rights, and the "law's calculation of personhood.” Situating the Neely case in scholarship on the Reconstruction Era, Marxist feminism, Black women’s history, I consider how formal legal reasoning relied on notions of gendered sentiment, character, and subjectivity to privilege white sentiment and justify racial unfreedom. Attending the immediate post-surrender South, my reading emphasizes how legal actors allowed Black women’s bodies to be contested sites of meaning, through which categories of race, gender, and labor might be explored. Challenging conventional understandings of the rule of law, I reconceptualize the rule of law as deference to legal institutions that transmute historical subjugation into contemporary unfreedom sanctioned by the state. By reading “along the bias grain” of the legal archive, this investigation reveals how postbellum legal frameworks positioned Black women as objects rather than subjects. This case illuminates the constitutive role Black women’s labor played in reconstructing American society and the continuities between nineteenth-century rationalization of violence and the ability of contemporary legal systems to respond to Black people’s injuries and claims.
--Dan Ernst
Gans on Black Conventions during Reconstruction
David Gans, Constitutional Accountability Center, has published Forgotten Framers: Black Conventions and the Second Founding, which is forthcoming in the Stanford Law Review:
This Article tells the forgotten story of the Black Conventions of the Reconstruction era, examining convenings of Black Americans across the nation during the time when the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments were under consideration. Invoking the promises of liberty and equality contained in the Declaration of Independence, these conventions insisted on Black Americans' right to respect and dignity, fought for control of their bodies and their right to be full members of the body politic, including at the polls, and demanded an end to racial prejudice and violence that kept them in a subjugated status. Through their relentless activism, Black Americans repeatedly pressed white Americans to make the United States into a multiracial democracy that guaranteed fundamental rights, protection, and equal citizenship as an American birthright. In large measure, the Amendments that produced our Second Founding bore the imprint of this constitutional activism.
While critical to understanding the meaning of the Reconstruction Amendments, this history has never gotten its due. Dominant judicial and scholarly accounts of the text and history of the Reconstruction Amendments privilege elite white understandings, presenting history as if white voices were the only ones that mattered. As this Article demonstrates, this impoverishes our understanding of the Reconstruction Amendments and ignores how the Black Convention movement of the Reconstruction era shaped the transformational guarantees in those Amendments. Grappling with the work of the Black Conventions can help generate an inclusive constitutionalism, deepen our understanding of the text and history of the Reconstruction Amendments, provide resources to resolve current constitutional disputes, and help recover fundamental constitutional principles the Supreme Court has long betrayed.
--Dan Ernst
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
White on Souter
G. Edward White, University of Virginia School of Law, has posted Taking Stock of Justice Souter, which is forthcoming in the Catholic University Law Review:
With Justice David Souter’s death in May, 2025 there has been a revival of interest in his life and career on the Supreme Court, but Souter remains largely unknown to the general public and there has been a paucity of efforts to characterize his performance as a justice. The result has been the presence of some uninformed conventional wisdom about Souter’s tenure on the Court. Souter has been characterized as a “stealth nominee,” one with a very sparse record as a lower court judge who deliberately hid his ideological tendencies during his nomination and was consequently expected to be a predictable conservative but turned out not to be so. It has also been suggested that Souter, after a first Term in which he regularly voted along with right-leaning justices, “moved left” after the appointments of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer in the early 1990s, justices whose liberal voting patterns influenced Souter. Finally, it has been claimed that Souter’s nomination ushered in a sea-change in the process of nominating justices: one in which the primary goal of nominating presidents and confirming senators has been to identify ideologically predictable justices, “no more Souters.”
David Souter (LC)
--Dan Ernst
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
CFP: Annual Forum of Young Legal Historians
[Via ESCLH Blog, we have the following CFP. SRE]
Annual Forum of Young Legal Historians: “Values in law through the ages,” Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan
Legal traditions, community, harmonization and integration have been the hallmarks of the Association's Annual Forums for 29 years. Values in law, which is the main topic of the 30th anniversary edition of the Meeting of Young Legal Historians, is an excellent opportunity to look at the issues discussed at previous forums from a wider perspective. The legal maxim Ubi societas ibi ius, which dates back to ancient times, is a simple affirmation of common sense: wherever there are people, wherever there is a community, wherever relationships and bonds are formed, there must be a certain order, which is referred to as ius — law. The conference “Values in law through the ages”, organized by the Faculty of Law and Administration and the Faculty of History of the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan, will be a space for discussion on the transdisciplinary issues of axiological matters present in various cultures and legal systems.
Conference theme. We are planning to include various contexts for the use of the main topic at the conference. We invite you to submit proposals for papers from various fields of law and other fields related to law, clearly linked to historical and legal analysis and the topic of the conference. The proposed topics, which are not exhaustive, include in particular issues such as principles of law, rule of law, legal unlawfulness, revolutions in law, crises of values in law, inter-systemic and intra-systemic contrasts of values, history of human rights, theoretical concepts of values in law or constitutional protection of values.
Requirements for submitting abstracts. We invite submissions on essentially any aspect of the values in the legal history. Authors may approach the topic dogmatically, historically or comparatively, they may focus on a specific period and place or present general reflections on the axiology of law in a historical context. Authors are encouraged to use innovative approaches and transdisciplinary research.
If you would like to present a paper during the conference, please send an application including an abstract of not more than 300 words and your CV to aylhforum2026@amu.edu.pl before 30 April 2026. Acceptance letters will be sent out by the end of May. Please send documents in PDF format.
In justified individual cases, the forum's scientific committee may consider abstracts earlier. To do so, please contact the organizing committee, indicating “EARLY APPLICATION” in the subject line of your message.
Presentations have to be in English and should not exceed 15 minutes each. Since one of the primary goals of the conference is to allow young researchers to get to know each other personally, we only accept presentations in person.
Publication. We intend to publish the presented papers. The organizing committee intends to resume publication with Peter Lang Publishing, which was associated with the first editions of our forums. Depending on the number of interested parties and financial possibilities, we plan to publish another volume of the Yearbook of Young Legal History, or a monograph, or a special issue in a Polish academic journal. The related details will be sent in advance to the accepted participants.
Conference fee. Two types of conference fees are anticipated for this year's forum:
1. The conference fee without post-conference publication costs is 200 € and does not include travel or accommodation costs.
2. The conference fee including post-conference publication costs is 300 € and also does not include travel or accommodation costs.
After the announcement of the abstract selection results on May 31, 2026, the Organizing Committee will contact the selected participants with further information on registration by paying the conference fee.
Other information. The Forum will be in English, and each paper presentation should not exceed 15 minutes, so there is time for discussions in the last part of each panel.
The submission deadline is 30th April 2026. Abstracts received after the submission deadline will be declined. Please indicate in your application the type of participation (without publication or with publication).
Keep in mind that registration is limited to a number of people. Therefore, early registration is strongly recommended!
Event organization. The forum will last four days: the first day will be a welcome day with the participation of keynote speakers and a special guest, the next two days will feature many parallel sessions, and on the last day we are planning a jubilee meeting on organizational matters of the Association for Young Legal Historians.
Our meeting will take place in Poznan, the capital of Greater Poland. The city can be reached by plane or other means of transport (train, bus). We recommend planning your travel and accommodation in advance. The organizing committee will provide recommendations in this regard at a later date.
We look forward to receiving your abstracts and we will uncompromisingly endeavor to provide a conference that is both academically and socially fulfilling. We wish you all the best for this time!
Organizing Committee:
Dawid Szulc, MA, Department of Government Systems Studies and Political and Legal Thought – Committee Chair
Patryk Mackowiak, MA, Department of Source Analysis and Auxiliary Historical Sciences – Vice Committee Chair
Fatma Mejri, MA, Department of Government Systems Studies and Political and Legal Thought
Maria Kola, MA, Department of Roman Law, Legal Traditions and Cultural Heritage Law
Szymon Siuda, MA, Department of Public Economic Law
Kamil Gawel, MA, Department of Medical and Pharmaceutical Law at the Poznan University of Medical Sciences
















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