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A Very Special Counsel
Special counsel appointments are all the rage these days. But do they actually solve the problem they’re meant to fix? -
Livestream: Fulton County Hearing on Severance Motions
Judge Scott McAfee's Motions Hearing for The State of Georgia v. Donald John Trump, et. al. -
The Cyberlaw Podcast: TechnoColonialism – In Reverse
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Lawfare Live: Trump's Trials and Tribulations, Sept. 7
Join the Lawfare team for a live discussion of this week’s developments in the Trump trials. -
Section 3 Disqualifications for Democracy Preservation
Disqualifying Trump from holding public office under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment is an example of democracy-limiting measures that help preserve democracy. -
The Lawfare Podcast: How to Implement Section 3 Disqualification, with Ned Foley and Derek Muller
How would disqualification due to Section 3 of the 14th Amendment work? -
Findings From the White Hat Cyber Forecasting Tournament
What 18 months of running a prediction platform for cybersecurity reveals about cyberattacks, metrics, and the availability of data -
Public Attitudes on US Intelligence (2021-2022)
Biden-era surveys affirm continued strong public support for the intelligence community but also signal growing partisanship. -
The Case for Prioritizing the Creation of an AI Benchmarking Consortium
Mitigating risks posed by AI requires regulatory innovation. Absent an independent auditing body, regulators will be a step behind. -
ChinaTalk: Why Congress Can Save Us All
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The Lawfare Podcast: The Coming Wave
As it becomes more accessible, what are AI's promises and dangers to both individuals and the state? -
The State of Nuclear Instability in South Asia: India, Pakistan, and China
The uneasy nuclear balance between India and Pakistan is being unsettled by India's competition with China and China's competition with the United States. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Trump's Trials and Tribulations, Aug. 31
This week's episode of "Trump's Trials and Tribulations" as a podcast episode. -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
An Assessment of the Ljubljana-The Hague Convention on Mutual Legal Assistance
The most significant treaty in international criminal law opens for signatures in January 2024. -
How to Address Mass Congressional Incapacitations
A catastrophe resulting in incapacitations of legislators could hobble Congress. This is how to protect democratic legitimacy in those moments. -
The Lawfare Podcast: The National Intelligence Strategy with Michael Collins of the National Intelligence Council
What is included in the National Intelligence Strategy? -
American Association of Law Schools Announces Upcoming Webinars and Call for Abstracts
The AALS will host webinars on presidential power and the manifestation of race in national security and is accepting submissions for its program, New Perspectives in National Security Law. -
The Legal Profession Reckons With Jan. 6
Among the co-conspirators identified by Jack Smith and Fani Willis are a great number of lawyers—many of whom are also facing potential professional sanctions. -
Rational Security: The “Gone ‘Til September” Edition
This week, Alan Rozenshtein, Quinta Jurecic, and Scott Anderson reunited to talk through the week’s big national security news.
More Articles
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Sharpening the Tools of a ‘National Injustice’
Trump’s Justice Department is aggressively using the civil disorder statute—which the department also used in Jan. 6 prosecutions—to go after protesters. -
Lawfare Daily: Adam Chan on the FCC’s Growing Role in National Security
Why has the FCC's role in national security role grown? -
The Judicial Learning Curve
District court judges watch each other struggle with the Trump administration—and adapt.