- John W. Cairns, professor of Civil Law at the University of Edinburgh, will deliver this year’s Eason-Weinmann Lecture on International and Comparative Law at Tulane Law School on November 20, 2025, at 5 p.m. in the Wendell H. Gauthier Moot Court Room 110. Professor Cairns’s lecture, "The Civil Code of the State of Louisiana: Context and Contents," will kick off a conference on the bicentennial of the Louisiana Civil Code.
- A notice and recording of Richard Primus's discussion with Noah Feldman of Professor Primus's book, The Oldest Constitutional Question, at HLS on September 25 (Harvard Law Today).
- UVA Law's notice of G. Edward White's Robert H. Jackson: A Life in Judgment (Oxford University Press).
- "Jamie Raskin (D-MD), former Federal Judge Michael Luttig, and Baltimore University Law Professor Kimberly Wehle discuss the history of the U.S. Constitution at an event hosted by George Washington's Mount Vernon" (C-SPAN).
- My Georgetown Law colleague John Mikhail lectured on anti-slavery and the Constitution on September 17 as part of Ithaca College’s observance of Constitution Day (Ithacan). DRE.
- Last month, Nancy Cott, Harvard University, spoke on “Doctors, Lawyers, and Feminists on the Road to Roe v. Wade" at Vanderbilt Law (Vanderbilt)
- Kurt Lash discusses constitutional debates over slavery before the Civil War (NCC).
- One of the Drinan Visiting Professors are at the Boston College Law School is Rebecca Horwitz-Willis, a recipient of the Kathryn T. Preyer Award from the American Society of Legal History (BC Law).
- The Organization of American Historians is sponsoring two webinars on immigration in October. The first, on denaturalization, will take place at 6pm ET on October 14. Register here. The second, on U.S. deportation policies from the Alien Friends Act of 1798 to today, will take place at 6pm ET on October 30. Register here. Both webinars are co-sponsored by the Immigration and Ethnic History Society.
- The October 2025 issue of the newsletter of the Historical Society of the DC Circuit is now available.
- We ought to have noticed sooner Time Immemorial, the podcast of the Osgoode Hall Society for Canadian Legal History.
- ICYMI: (Before the government shutdown), visitors to the National Archives react to seeing the entire Constitution (WaPo). Jillian Foley on America’s Privacy Policy (HNN). Douglas M. Charles, Penn State, on history repeating itself at the FBI (The Conversation).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.