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The story of Jan. 6’s aftermath—and all of Lawfare’s coverage of it—in one place.
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The Japanese prime minister’s recent visit to Seoul signals a long-awaited sea change.
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To talk about spyware and its potential regulation under international law Senior Editor Alan Rozenshtein spoke with Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, the Robina Chair in Law, Public Policy, and Society at the Univer...
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The recent death of Palestinian prisoner Khader Adnan represents a wider problem with Israel’s expansive preventive detentions schemes.
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The Treasury Department defended its authority to sanction decentralized “smart contracts” used by North Korea to launder stolen funds.
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Rep. Santos was indicted for violating FECA, a federal campaign finance law.
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Lawfare Managing Editor Tyler McBrien sat down with Ali Breland, a reporter at Mother Jones covering internet disinformation, technology, race, and politics, to discuss his article on Germany's neo-Nazi ...
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No single tool, legal or technical, is able to fight cybercrime. But civil action litigation, however imperfect, is an effective tool to disrupt cybercrime that is available now.
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Biden continues to follow Trump’s lead in using emergency and non-emergency powers to deploy thousands of troops to the southern border, cementing a new normal for the Department of Defense.
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In a May 8 order, Judge Juan Merchan prohibited Trump from posting materials and information from the case on social media.
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To understand the situation in El Salvador, Lawfare Senior Editor Quinta Jurecic spoke with Manuel Meléndez-Sánchez, a PhD candidate in Political Science at Harvard University who has written about Presi...
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But not as the overseer of general-purpose AI.
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The legal dimensions of the Black Sea Grain Initiative offer insights into the actual and potential roles of international law at times of crisis.
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A wide range of public grievances about curation simply don’t make sense.
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To assess the causes and impact of the United States’ declining use of treaties, Jack Goldsmith sat down with Jeffrey Peake, a political scientist at Clemson University.
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It’s time for democracies to stop focusing on disinformation.
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Policymakers and cable industry insiders disagree about the threats to critical infrastructure and how to address them, but greater dialogue could help.
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The legitimacy of the Justice Department’s decision on Hunter Biden is hard enough to achieve without self-serving commentary from the president.