- “[T]he concept of a legal ‘right to work,' harkens back to the early Twentieth Century when this and other substantive due process doctrines were used to strike down Progressive labor laws,” writes former LHB Guest Blogger Sophia Lee in a post on ACSblog that draws upon her book Workplace Constitution. "[H]ow have right-to-work proponents managed to rally successfully behind such an anachronistic term?”
- Here's Penn's press release on LHB Guest Blogger Sarah Barringer Gordon's Guggenheim.
- Ronald Collins has alerted us to some forthcoming Posneria, a biograpy of Judge Richard Posner from Oxford University Press and a new book by the judge, Divergent Paths: The Academy and the Judiciary (Harvard University Press).
- Jo Guldi, Brown University, and Richard Armitage, Harvard University, on The History Manifesto, to the Washington History Seminar at the Woodrow Wilson Center, 5th Floor Conference Room, Monday, April 20, 2015, 4:00pm - 5:30pm. Eric Arnesen, J.R. McNeill, and Rosemarie Zagarri will comment.
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.
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