Karen Tani
@kmtani.bsky.social
8.9K followers 1.3K following 240 posts
Penn Integrates Knowledge University Professor in History & Law @Penn. Co-runs the Legal History Blog. Research focuses on modern U.S. history, including poverty, disability, rights, federalism, agencies, the state, LPE.
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kmtani.bsky.social
I don't have the right emoji for how it feels to read this appreciation -- for a piece that felt so challenging to write and that so many people helped me craft. 🙏
tomsugrue.bsky.social
You must read this truly brilliant piece by @kmtani.bsky.social in the current Harvard Law Review. Her reflection on the Supreme Court, curation, narration, and history is one of the best pieces of scholarship that I have *ever* read. This will become a classic. I am in awe.
Curation, Narration, Erasure: Power and Possibility at the U.S. Supreme
Introduction “Dead, dead, dead.”Transcript of Oral Argument at 19, Acheson Hotels, LLC v. Laufer, 144 S. Ct. 18 (2023) (No. 22-429) (statement of Kagan, J.), htt
harvardlawreview.org
Reposted by Karen Tani
jaimesantos.bsky.social
I was delighted to attend the William & Mary Supreme Court Preview this past weekend, where there were several panels about the Supreme Court's emergency docket. I've also heard several interviews with/public remarks by Justices Barrett and Kavanaugh on the topic. /1
Reposted by Karen Tani
legalhistoryblog.bsky.social
Job Alert: Constitutional Law and Legal History
[We note the following advertisement for an Assistant Professor of U.S. Constitutional Law and Legal History in the Kinder Institute on Constitutional Democracy in the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Missouri-Columbia.  DRE.] The Kinder Institute on Constitutional Democracy at the University of Missouri invites applications for an interdisciplinary, assistant professor tenure-track job in U.S. Constitutional Law and Legal History. Candidates from history, political science, and joint JD/PhDs are encouraged to apply, though all applicants should have PhD in hand by 1 August 2026. Depending on their expertise, the holder of this position will have an academic home in either the Department of History or the Truman School of Government and Public Affairs. The search committee is looking for candidates whose research and teaching focuses on the constitutional development, public law, and legal history of the United States in the chronological period Minimum Qualifications: Ph.D. in History or Political Science by time of appointment. Candidates should have an established research trajectory, commensurate with career stage, as well as college-level teaching experience.  Application Materials.  Use the online application and be prepared to upload your cover letter, CV, list of three reference contacts, and chapter or article length writing sample. The cover letter should include statements on both your research and teaching.  Applicants may contact the Chair of the Search Committee, Kinder Institute Associate Director Dr. Billy Coleman ([email protected]) with any questions about the job duties. Contact Andrew Longley ([email protected]) for any questions about the application process. Deadline for applications is October 22; the position will remain open until filled. Benefit Eligibility This position is eligible for University benefits. As part of your total compensation, the University offers a comprehensive benefits package, including medical, dental and vision plans, retirement, and educational fee discounts for all four UM System campuses.  For additional information on University benefits, please visit the Faculty & Staff Benefits website.  The University of Missouri is an Equal Opportunity Employer.  To request ADA accommodations, please call the Director of Accessibility and ADA at 573-884-7278.
dlvr.it
Reposted by Karen Tani
jacobdcharles.bsky.social
Really enjoying this fascinating symposium at @dukelaw.bsky.social on historical facts & constitutional law, incl. this great panel w/ @kmtani.bsky.social, Christen Hammock Jones & Darrell Miller about choices in the compilation of historical records.
Reposted by Karen Tani
stephenwest.bsky.social
Hoping my first teaching day of the semester goes better than Frederic Bancroft's 🤞🤞
stephenwest.bsky.social
To my fellow teachers back in the classroom today:

Here's wishing you a better start than Frederic Bancroft had in 1892 🗃️
snip of letter:  

“Dear professor Burgess:

On Monday, the 14th, I went to room 24 Hamilton Hall at the hour appointed for the beginning of my lectures. No student came. I saw professor Goodnow subsequently to reassure myself that there was no mistake about the time and location. Tuesday I went again. I found the room occupied by another class period each day I called at the faculty room, but found no one in.”
Reposted by Karen Tani
legalhistoryblog.bsky.social
JACH (Summer 2025)
The Summer 2025 issue of the Journal of Supreme Court History is now available online.    Gerard N. Magliocca, Right in Theory, Wrong in Practice”: Women’s Suffrage and the Reconstruction Amendments The most remarkable constitutional argument ever forgotten is Representative William Loughridge’s dissent from an 1871 report by the House Judiciary Committee. That Report rejected a petition by Victoria Woodhull claiming that the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments gave women the right to vote. S. Deborah Kang, Creating a “Mass Production Technique”: Anti-Mexican Racism and the McCarran-Walter Act of 1952 New archival research shines a light on the anti-Mexican animus that motivated the authors and agents of the McCarran-Walter Act of 1952 and reveals that racism was a feature, rather than a bug, of the legislation that still impacts today’s immigration debates.Sam Erman and Nathan Perl-Rosenthal, Jus Soli Nation to Jus Soli Evasion: International Lawyers for White Supremacy and the Road through Wong Kim Ark   In an effort to dismantle the Citizenship Clause and the U.S.’s traditional recognition of “jus soli,” racist opponents to the Fourteenth Amendment set out to establish a practice of “jus sanguinis” with a weaponization of international law. These attempts backfired, and “country by birth” prevailed and more solidly reaffirmed as the Citizenship Clause. Katherine Shaw reviews David Pozen's The Constitution of the War on Abortion  David Pozen’s The Constitution of the War on Drugs reveals how constitutional law and values have largely been absent from the arguments surrounding the war on drugs—in an interesting contrast to the constitution’s central place surrounding the debates on abortion and reproductive freedoms.  --Dan Ernst 
dlvr.it
Reposted by Karen Tani
drsinhaesq.bsky.social
If you are looking for a great open-access Torts casebook, here is the one I'll be using this semester:
kmtani.bsky.social
Torts teachers: the 2025 edition of the completely FREE Witt-Tani casebook is now up on the CALI website! Thanks again to @johnfabianwitt.bsky.social for adding me as a co-author a few editions back. I love this book & love hearing from those of you who use it! www.cali.org/books/torts-...
Torts: Cases, Principles, and Institutions | CALI
www.cali.org
kmtani.bsky.social
Thanks for recommending the book!
Reposted by Karen Tani
gauthamrao.bsky.social
It’s been a hell of a run. Being Editor of @lawandhistrev.bsky.social has been the greatest honor of my career. But it had to end some time. I’ll be stepping down as Editor by next summer. I’ll give proper thanks to LHR’s Associate Editors & ASLH folks in due course. What a bittersweet moment!
Reposted by Karen Tani
marydudziak.bsky.social
Big news! After 8 years of exemplary service, @gauthamrao.bsky.social is stepping down as editor of @lawandhistrev.bsky.social. The ASLH seeks applications for the next editor. Great opportunity, though Gautham's shoes will be hard to fill.
Details here:
legalhistoryblog.blogspot.com/2025/08/law-...
The ASLH Publications Committee invites applications for the position. Applicants should be members of the American Society for Legal History who are accomplished legal historians, have the intellectual range to work with manuscripts from different historical periods and geographic regions, are conversant with both law and history, and welcome the opportunity to identify and promote the best scholarship in the field. They should be prepared to request release time and other departmental or institutional support.
Reposted by Karen Tani
legalhistoryblog.bsky.social
Penn's Certificate of Study in History and Historical Research Methods
[Penn Carey Law has posted the following announcement.  DRE]  Beginning in the 2025-2026 academic year, the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School will offer a new Certificate of Study in History and Historical Research Methods, granted by the History Department in the School of Arts and Sciences at Penn. The Certificate, one of more than a dozen certificates of study offered at the Law School, is open to all Penn Carey Law students. Certificates of study provide opportunities for credentials in additional areas, allowing for more concentrated coursework en route to specialized or focused career paths. “I was immediately excited by Professors Karen Tani and Serena Mayeri’s proposal to create this new Certificate, because the topics are increasingly important to the practice of law,” said Amanda Aronoff, Managing Director, Cross-Disciplinary Programs at the Law School and Director of Student Engagement for the Francis J. & William Polk Carey JD/MBA Program at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School and the Wharton School. “In addition, even though Penn Carey Law offers numerous and diverse cross-disciplinary offerings, there isn’t anything else like this Certificate.” The Certificate arrives at a time of exciting growth for legal history at the Law School, which has seen the national recognition of multiple Penn legal historians in recent years as well as the continued expansion of the Legal History Consortium, uniting the Law School and Penn’s History Department to foster innovative research, scholarship, and education in law and history. “Despite the strength of legal history at Penn, we didn’t previously offer students structured opportunities that join law and history, aside from our JD/PhD program,” said Seaman Family University Professor Karen Tani L’07, PhD’11. “That struck me as a big gap.” Additionally, Tani believes that offering law students more opportunities to engage with history as part of their education and careers will better equip them for today’s legal landscapes. “It’s clear that history has become increasingly important to Supreme Court rulings,” she said. “We see this in the Court’s deepening commitment to originalism to decide constitutional questions, as well as in its turn to ‘history and tradition’ to determine whether the Constitution protects various ‘unenumerated’ rights.” Tani points to some of the most important decisions of the past five years as examples – regarding abortion, affirmative action, firearms regulation, nationwide injunctions, and more. “We wanted to create a certificate that allows law students to be educated consumers of legal opinions that rely on history and to meaningfully engage with the methods and commitments of the discipline,” she said. Students pursuing the Certificate must complete four courses in the general area of History and Historical Research Methods – one at the Law School and three in History – as well as attend four History-sponsored events, such as workshops, lectures, or pedagogy seminars. “Penn has long been a leader in legal history, and our JD-PhD joint program in American legal history has been a proud success,” said Jared Farmer, Chair of the Department of History at Penn. “We are excited to deepen the relationship between the School of Arts and Sciences and Penn Carey Law with this certificate program.” 
dlvr.it
kmtani.bsky.social
Torts teachers: the 2025 edition of the completely FREE Witt-Tani casebook is now up on the CALI website! Thanks again to @johnfabianwitt.bsky.social for adding me as a co-author a few editions back. I love this book & love hearing from those of you who use it! www.cali.org/books/torts-...
Torts: Cases, Principles, and Institutions | CALI
www.cali.org
Reposted by Karen Tani
rachelshelden.bsky.social
Historian friends: tell me about your favorite research & writing tools.

As a bonus, would love to know where you learned how to use them & if you'd be interested in sharing your knowledge w/ others.
kmtani.bsky.social
New this fall @penncareylaw.bsky.social: JD students can earn a Certificate in History & Historical Research Methods. Penn has great strength in #LegalHistory, and I'm excited for our law students to benefit!
New Certificate of Study in History and Historical Research Methods
The certificate is available to Penn Carey Law Students beginning in the 2025-2026 academic year.
www.law.upenn.edu
Reposted by Karen Tani
gauthamrao.bsky.social
The latest Docket! Special focus on methods and new books that are making big waves in the legal history world!

Have a new legal history article or book? Want to write a book review? Offer thoughts on how your work addresses the present? We're taking pitches for the 12/25 issue-DM me!
lawandhistrev.bsky.social
Law and History Review is pleased to announce publication of this year's first issue of The Docket, our digital imprint dedicated to bringing cutting-edge legal history to our readers--no paywall, no access restrictions.

Here's our table of contents for Volume 8, Issue 1-2 (2025)
Reposted by Karen Tani
lawandhistrev.bsky.social
Law and History Review is pleased to announce publication of this year's first issue of The Docket, our digital imprint dedicated to bringing cutting-edge legal history to our readers--no paywall, no access restrictions.

Here's our table of contents for Volume 8, Issue 1-2 (2025)
Reposted by Karen Tani
annieheff.bsky.social
Coming soon to an open access APSR near you:

(all kidding aside, I'm so happy to see this piece out in the world)
Screen capture of the first bage of an article in American Political Science Review, reading as follows:
Title: "They Attend Strictly to Their Own Business": Disability and the Construction of the Worker-Citizen
Ann K. Heffernan, University of Michigan, United States

Contributing to a growing interest in disability in political science, this article makes the case for the central role of disability in upholding the belief in work as requisite for full citizenship. Turning to the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, it shows how disability and the figure of the disabled worker were used to fortify emergent understandings of work against the changes wrought by industrial capitalism. Focusing on three sites of disabled labor—the school-based workshop, custodial institution, and industrial factory—it reveals the crucial ideological work performed by disability in sustaining the myth of the independent worker-citizen. Where existing scholarship has focused on disability either as an identity category or as a target of rights and policy, this article models an alternative approach, arguing for the relevance of disability as a concept that is integral to, and productive of, the ways we understand citizenship and political belonging.
kmtani.bsky.social
I also appreciated @kateshaw.bsky.social's comments about Souter's approach to judging -- including his willingness to be transparent about the value choices that go into constitutional decisionmaking.
kmtani.bsky.social
I especially loved the Justice Souter retrospective part of this episode. A highlight for me was Erin Delaney's story about Souter's first taste of Sprite(!), but the whole thing was very moving & insightful. 🙏
leahlitman.bsky.social
What a return from vacation ... Kate & I do a whirlwind tour through the legal news (including some concerning fallout from SCOTUS's recent decision in Catholic Charities).

And then are joined for a delightful retrospective on Justice Souter by Alli Orr Larsen & Erin Delaney! Check it out!
strictscrutiny.bsky.social
NEW: we break down the legal angles of the Trump-Epstein … situation; cover SCOTUS’s fake & nonexistent reasoning on the shadow docket; & talk lower court happenings.

THEN-our Justice Souter retrospective with his former clerks, Profs. Alli Orr Larsen & Erin Delaney. crooked.com/podcast/can-...
Reposted by Karen Tani
karl-jacoby.bsky.social
Bluesky hive mind: what are the best books/articles on the history of academic freedom? Thanks in advance for your help!