- Saul Cornell’s contribution to the Slate series, “How Originalism Ate the Law,” is Why the Right Dominates When It Comes to Legal “History.” (His answer? “They’re invested in legal education, creating an originalist industrial complex with outsize influence.”) Also, Thomas Wolf explains the Brennan Center’s efforts to mobilize historians to counter the Supreme Court’s historical claims.
-
For Members of the American Society for Legal History: A reminder that
the ASLH has announce “a new virtual initiative – the Early Career
(Virtual) Legal History Workshop – designed to provide support and
intellectual community to early career scholars working in legal
history, broadly defined. Applications are invited from early career,
pre-tenure scholars, publishing in English, who have completed PhDs or
JDs (those working toward a JD/PhD must have completed the PhD).”
Deadline for Applications: June 30, 2024. More.
- “History and the Law,” a panel conversation “on important moments in American legal history, applying history education to the study and practice of the law, and more,” presented as an introduction to the History Pre-Law Concentration at Villanova University (YouTube).
- Ariela Gross, UCLA School of Law, will lecture on “Erasing Slavery – How Stories of Slavery and Freedom (in Natchez) Shape Battles Over the Constitution” at the Tuesday, May 28 meeting of the Natchez Historical Society (Natchez Democrat).
- LHB Founder Mary Dudziak, Emory Law, on the legacy of Korean War at the recent TCU Conference on the Korean War (YouTube).
- More on that recent conference on the political history of the New Deal at Vanderbilt University.
- Erika Rappaport, University of California, Santa Barbara, reviews The Rise of Mass Advertising, Law, Enchantment and the Cultural Boundaries of British Modernity, by Anat Rosenberg in the English Historical Review. Christopher Tomlins, Berkeley Law, reviews Joseph Fishkin and William E. Forbath’s The Anti-Oligarchy Constitution: Reconstructing the Economic Foundations of American Democracy in the Journal of Law and Political Economy. And Ajay K. Mehrotra, Northwestern Law, reviews Andrew Koppelman‘s Burning Down the House: How Libertarian Philosophy Was Corrupted by Delusion and Greed, also in JLPE.
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.