- A recording of Jerome Frank: The Making of a New Deal Lawyer, the 2022 Maurice and Muriel Fulton Lecture I delivered at the University of Chicago Law School last month, is now available. DRE
- "On Agriculture & Antitrust: A Brief Summary of Legislative History," an illustrated white paper by Jonathan Coppess, Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics, University of Illinois, is here.
- New online in the AJLH and on Oxford Academic: Millionaires Against Billionaires: The Rise and Fall of the Private Plaintiff Antitrust Lawyer, 1946–1976, by Peter Labuza.
- In December 1980, Richard A. Posner and George J. Stigler advised Ronald Reagan’s transition team how the new president could “throttle back on antitrust enforcement.” Read it here.
- "How Japanese Americans Fought for—and Won—Redress for WWII Incarceration," by Mitchell T. Maki (History).
- Where to begin on the historians' engagement with Justice Alito's draft opinon in Hobbs? In the NYT with The Fight Over Abortion History and/or its ten-book reading list? With Treva B. Lindsey’s Abortion has been debated in the U.S. since 18th century U.S. Supreme Court Justice Alito's abortion history lesson in dispute (Reuters)? Bernadette Meyler on LAW360 podcast? In the Atlantic, where Mary Ziegler writes that "The Conservatives Aren’t Just Ending Roe—They’re Delighting in It"? We also took note of Kelly O'Donnell and Lauren MacIvor Thompson's response at History Watch: "It Doesn’t Have to Be the End for US Abortion Rights."
- Also in the Atlantic: Susan J. Pearson (Northwestern University) on "Why Nonbinary Birth Certificates Aren’t All That Radical."
- Update: An appreciation of former ASLH President Stanley N. Katz!
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.