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Countering Hamas’s Financial Network
Some of the organization's sources of funding will be easier to target than others. -
A New Player in Coffee County
Omissions by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation cast further doubt on its work product. -
The Lawfare Podcast, Trump’s Trials and Tribulations: Gag Orders, Telephones, and Other Stuff
Listen to this week's Trump's Trials and Tribulations now. -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Perhaps Lawful, but Awful: The Environmental Impacts of the Israel-Hamas War
Examining the IDF’s air strikes on Gaza against environmental protections of the law of armed conflict. -
Montana Judge Blocks TikTok Ban
The preliminary injunction stated that the ban was “unlikely to even pass intermediate scrutiny.” -
D.C. Appeals Court Rules Trump Can Be Sued for Inciting Jan. 6 Attack
In Blassingame, the court found that Trump is not protected under absolute immunity from civil claims for damages incurred during the Jan. 6 riot. -
Living Off the Land Is the New Normal + When Hacks Upset Housing Markets
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
Navigating Toward an EU-U.S. Agreement on Electronic Evidence
Several models exist for an agreement, but reaching one will require navigating sovereignty and rule-of-law challenges. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Anna Bower Critiques the Georgia Bureau of Investigation
What is missing from the GBI's report on Coffee County? -
Lawfare No Bull: Harrison Floyd’s Bond Revocation Hearing
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Rahimi, Second Amendment Originalism, and the Disarming of Loyalists During the American Revolution
Founding-era laws disarmed many deemed dangerous by the state, providing a historical basis for the statute at issue in Rahimi. -
Rational Security: The “We’re Moving to Microsoft” Edition
This week, Scott and Quinta sat down with Molly Reynolds and Eugenia Lostri to talk through the week’s big national security news -
ChinaTalk: Taiwan Election Showdown! A Blue Prof and Green Pol Explain
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Petersen v. Argentina: Unpacking a $16 Billion Judgment
How private investors won big against a foreign sovereign state. -
Chatter: Coups and Counterintelligence with Peter Strzok
Peter Strzok talks to Ben Wittes about how he ended up in a career focused on counterintelligence -
The Lawfare Podcast: Comparing Civilian Casualty Tolerance in the Israel-Hamas War to the War Against ISIS with Mark Lattimer
Mark Lattimer discusses his recent article on Israel’s tolerance for civilian deaths -
Justice Department Indicts Indian National for Attempted Murder of Sikh Activist
The Justice Department unsealed an indictment of an Indian national for his alleged participation in a murder-for-hire plot to assassinate a Sikh activist in New York City. -
Two Bills and the Congressional Divide Over Section 702 Reauthorization
With FISA Section 702 soon set to expire, two Senate bills and a House report frame the reauthorization debate as it comes down to the wire. -
Hacking and Cybersecurity: Class 10, Anonymity & The Dark Web
The tenth class of Lawfare's cybersecurity and hacking course is now available to the public.
More Articles
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The Situation: Abandoning America
Yale intellectuals congratulate themselves for moving to Canada. -
Lawfare Live: Trials of the Trump Administration, May 16
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation targeting actions from President Trump. -
Romania, Foreign Election Interference, and a Dangerous U.S. Retreat
The candidates may sound typical for today’s Europe; however, the ongoing Romanian election has been anything but.