- Our friends over at the Federal Judicial Center have alerted us to their very useful new webpage, Selected Developments in the History of Supreme Court Jurisdiction.
- Lucy Salyer, University of New Hampshire, has published the essay The Irish-American Social Club Whose Exploits in Their Homeland Sparked a New Understanding of Citizenship in Zócalo Public Square, as part of the Smithsonian-sponsored series, “What It Means to Be American.”
- Welcome to the blogosphere, History and the Law, moderated by Catherine Evans, Franziska Exeler, Kalyani Ramnath, and Surabhi Ranganathan! The blog is part of the Exchanges of Economic, Legal and Political Ideas Programme, which is supported at the University of Cambridge by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
- Over at New Books Network there’s a podcast with Andrew Fede on his latest book, Homicide Justified: The Legality of Killing Slaves in the United States and Atlantic World. Mary Block reviewed the book here, and Jeannine DeLombard reviewed it here.
- As part of its 150-year celebrations, the University of Wisconsin Law School hosted a retrospective event recently on the work and legacies of J. Willard Hurst and Frank Remington. "Law in Actions Innovations in Wisconsin Law School Courses, 1950-1970" featured Dirk Hartog and Malcolm Feeley, plus Wisconsin faculty Bill Clune, Bill Whitford, Cecelia Klingele, and our blogger Mitra Sharafi.
- Advance alert: Testimonial Exclusions and Religious Freedom in Early America, by Jud Campbell, University of Richmond School of Law, is now available from Law and History Review.
- Update: Laura Kalman, "Distinguished Professor of History from University of California, Santa Barbara, Will Present Annual Robert T. Miller Lecture" at Baylor University on March 25.