- The Heart of Suffolk: Witch Trials, "a new pop-up exhibition . . . exploring the stories of the women and men who faced execution after being accused of witchcraft in Suffolk, will be displayed at Sudbury Arts Centre until the end of October, before taking over The Bull pub in Long Melford and then Elmswell Library" (BBC).
- The Balkinization symposium on John Fabian Witt's The Radical Fund continues with new contributions by Aziz Rana, Laura Weinrib, Larry Kramer, LHB Founder Mary L. Dudziak, David Pozen, Benjamin Sachs, David M. Schizer, Jamal Greene, and David E. Bernstein.
- On Thursday, October 9, UVA Law hosted a panel on G. Edward White’s Robert H. Jackson: A Life in Judgement, consisting of Sarah A. Seo, Lucas A. Powe Jr., and Ross E. Davies. Dean Leslie Kendrick introduced the panel and Risa Goluboff moderated. More.
- Samantha Barbas, University of Iowa College of Law, will speak on New York Times v. Sullivan in Marshall University’s lecture series on constitutional democracy at 7 p.m. Tuesday, October 28.
- Jill Lepore will join National Public Radio’s Steve Inskeep to discuss We the People at 8 p.m. (doors open at 7 p.m.) Nov. 6 at the Morrison Center for the Performing Arts on Boise State University’s campus (ICS).
- Noah Rosenblum, NYU Law, is excellent on the history of the removal power in this episode of the Reconstruction Agenda podcast.
- The records of President Harry Truman's Commission on the Renovation of the Executive Mansion (1949-1952) have been digitized. H/t Adam Rothman.
- Time's Made By History: Revoking passports can backfire, by Denise Lynn.
- ICYMI: David Noonan on Jackson at Nuremberg (Smithsonian). Jessica T. Mathews reviews Akhil Reed Amar’s Born Equal (Foreign Affairs). Time immemorial (ianVisits). Failed Kansas constitutional amendments (KSNT 27 News).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.