- Kenneth W. Mack & Jacob Katz Cogan, Introduction: Rewriting the Boundaries of Legal History
- Part I: The Political Economy of Time
- Matthew Axtell, Views from Rathole Mountain: A Lawscape Journey through Old Virginia
- Donna Dennis, The Rise of Retail Stockholder Litigation and the Creation of the Plaintiff's Bar in American Business Law, 1930-1950
- Felicia Kornbluh, Private Law, Public Welfare, Marital Ideals, and The Gender Binary . . . or, What I Learned at the Socio-Legal Revolution
- Maribel Morey, Power of the Purse: How “the Philanthropic North” Has Helped Determine Which Individuals, Groups, and Ideas in the Black Freedom Struggle Will Thrive Nationally
- Sarah Seo, “Kindred to Treason”: Conspiracy Laws in the United States
- Part II: Law, Space, and Place in History
- Catherine L. Evans, The Case as Episode: Murder and Migration in Colonial Australia
- Maeve Glass, The Chain and the Rope: Illuminating Constitutional Traditions
- Mitra Sharafi, South Asians at the Inns of Court: Empire, Expulsion, and Redemption circa 1900
- Part III: Rethinking Method: Law and Everything Else
- Jessica K. Lowe, “Our Experiences Make Us Who We Are”: Lessons from Thomas Ruffin and Dirk Hartog
- Farah Peterson, Debtor Constitutionalism
- Christina D. Ponsa-Kraus, Roosters and Resistance
- Laura Weinrib, Law, History, and the Interwar ACLU's Jewish Lawyers
Monday, October 21, 2024
Mack & Cogan: In Between and Across: Legal History Without Boundaries
Kenneth W. Mack (Harvard Univ. - Law) & Jacob Katz Cogan (Univ. of Cincinnati - Law) have published In Between and Across: Legal History Without Boundaries (Oxford Univ. Press 2024). Contents include: