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  "path": "/2026/02/weekend-roundup_01474633039.html",
  "publishedAt": "2026-02-28T05:30:00.204Z",
  "site": "https://legalhistoryblog.blogspot.com",
  "tags": [
    "Early Career Achievement Award",
    "the] untold history of habeas corpus\" ([Nebraska Today",
    "reviews",
    "Reclaiming the Founders’ Frameworks",
    "This one",
    "this one",
    "Brennan Center for Justice",
    "brief",
    "here",
    "recording",
    "The Rule of Law and the Common Good",
    "short piece",
    "Star",
    "The 1962 Michigan Constitutional Convention: Policy, Politics, and Citizen Engagement",
    "Concord Monitor",
    "NYSBA",
    "Dorf",
    "CNO"
  ],
  "textContent": "  * Congratulations to **Hardeep Dhillon** (University of Pennsylvania), who received the Early Career Achievement Award from the **Association for Asian American Studies**.\n\n\n  * The **University of Nebraska-Lincoln** 's notice of **Katrina Jagodinsky** 's NEH grant to \"reveal the] untold history of habeas corpus\" ([Nebraska Today).\n\n\n  * Overt at Jotwell, **Marin Levy** reviews **Kevin Arlyck** 's _The Nation at Sea: The Federal Courts and American Sovereignty, 1789–1825_ (2025).\n\n\n  * \"Reclaiming the Founders’ Frameworks\": **Stanford Law** 's notice of **Jud Campbell.**** **\n\n\n  * We've learned of several historians' briefs in the birthright citizenship case, _Trump v. Barbara._  This one is by **Jed H. Shugerman** and **Evan Bernick** , and this one, prepared in cooperation with the Brennan Center for Justice, is by **Martha S. Jones** and **Kate Masur**.  **Eric Muller** 's brief describes the recognition of the birthright citizenship of the children of interned Japanese parents without allegiance to the United States.  **Keith Whittington** 's brief includes the heading, \"Revisionist History Cannot Hold Water.\"  And the **Cato Institute**  weighs in here.\n\n\n  * A recording, with a very substantial timeline, of the **American Historical Association** 's congressional briefing on the history of vaccines, with **Elena Conis, David Oshinsky** , and former ASLH president **Michael Willrich**.\n\n\n  * “The Rule of Law and the Common Good,” a conference on March 12 and 13 at **Boston Colleg** e, \"will explore the synergy between legal theory and Catholic social thought.\"\n\n\n\n  * \"A short piece for lay readers on _Youngstown_ \" by **William Baude, University of Chicago Law**.\n\n\n  * **Mary Arden, Lady Arden of Heswall** , the former Justice of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, will lecture on Magna Carta on Friday, April 24, at Soulton Hall, Shropshire (Star).\n\n\n  * The **Historical Society of Michigan** is hosting the virtual event The 1962 Michigan Constitutional Convention: Policy, Politics, and Citizen Engagement, with **Doug Brook** and **Aria Dwoskin** , on Tuesday, March 3, at 12:00 p.m.  Free for members; $7 for everyone else.\n\n\n  *  ICYMI: A report of a panel on the New Hampshire Constitution of 1776, with **Lorianne Updike Schulzke** (Concord Monitor).  The New York State Bar Association notes its sesquicentennial (NYSBA).  **Eric Segall** argues that \"If 'It Takes a Theory to Beat a Theory,' Originalism Loses\" (Dorf).  **Robert Morton Duncan** , the first Black justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio (CNO).\n\n\n\n  Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.",
  "title": "Weekend Roundup",
  "updatedAt": "2026-02-28T05:30:00.110Z"
}