- "The Selden Society regularly funds a Milsom Studentship for a person undertaking research in English legal history leading to the degree of PhD (or equivalent) at a university in the United Kingdom."
- A review of Geoffrey Samuel's Principia Iuris: A Historical and Comparative Introduction to the English Law (Edward Elgar Publishing) (Law Society Gazette).
- A review of James Hart's The U.S. Supreme Court in American Society: Historical Perspectives (Edward Elgar Publishing) (Law Society Gazette).
- Washington University-St. Louis Law invited UCLA's Stuart Banner back to lecture on his history of the US Supreme Court (Student Life).
- On Tuesday, April 28, from 6:00 - 8:00 PM, the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Appellate Division, First Department with support from the Historical Society of the New York Courts, will sponsor a talk on The Constitution’s Framers: What They Teach us about Making America Better, by John D. Feerick, Norris Professor of Law, Fordham Law School Dean Emeritus, and a panel discussion with William M. Treanor, Dean Emeritus, Georgetown University Law Center and Fordham Law School and John Rogan, Senior Fellow, Fordham Law School. Register here.
- Jill Hasday, Minnesota Law, discusses We the Men on the Infinite Women podcast.
- A fully funded four-year Collaborative Doctoral Studentship at the University of Leeds on The Making of the National Archive: The First Century of the Public Record Office.
- Over at Balkinization, a symposium is underway of Stephen Skowronek's The Adaptability Paradox. Several legal historians are slate to contribute.
- The National Constitution Center has posted the recording of its Town Hall on Women and the American Revolution with Mary Beth Norton, the Mary Donlon Alger Professor Emerita of American History at Cornell University, and Rosemarie Zagarri, distinguished university professor of history at George Mason University.
- ICYMI: Back to the archives to defend reproductive rights (Ms. Magazine). A dispatch from the new "civic education" (University of Colorado-Boulder). New York's woman lawyers (NYSBA). Michael R. Dreeben revisits Robert Jackson’s "The Federal Prosecutor" (HLR).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.
