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Public Attitudes on U.S. Intelligence (2023-2024)
Final Biden-era surveys affirm continued strong public support for the U.S. intelligence community but also signal increasingly entrenched partisanship. -
The Situation: Extortion as Governance
How criminal investigation becomes an instrument of monetary policy. -
Explaining Trump’s Oil Grab
There’s a reason why countries don’t go to war over oil. The Trump administration miscalculated the costs. -
Scaling Laws: How AI Can Transform Local Criminal Justice, with Francis Shen
Discussing the intersection of neuroscience, AI, and criminal justice. -
Lawfare Daily: The Latest in Iran, with Richard Nephew
Taking stock of U.S. policy toward Iran one year into President Trump's second administration. -
Sen. Kelly Sues Department of Defense Over Disciplinary Actions
The suit alleges the Defense Department retaliated against Kelly for protected speech and interfered with his Article I duties. -
Priorities for U.S. Participation in International AI Capacity-Building
The U.S. risks exclusion from the collaborative frameworks shaping AI governance across the majority of the world's population. -
The Trump Administration Targets Europe’s Content Moderation Laws
New U.S. visa bans against Europeans over content moderation likely will elicit an EU response. -
Lawfare Daily: The Trials of the Trump Administration, Jan. 9
Listen to the Jan. 9 livestream as a podcast. -
The Situation: We Agree
Finding points of common ground on Jan. 6 with the White House -
U.S.-China Space Competition Is Anchored to Geography on Earth
The U.S. competitive advantage in space depends on infrastructure hosted by allies. -
The Week That Was
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
When Misinformation Means the Difference Between Life and Death
A Review of Daniel Silverman, “Seeing Is Disbelieving: Why People Believe Misinformation in War, and When They Know Better” (Cambridge University Press, 2024). -
Lawfare Daily: The Legal Fallout After a Fatal ICE Shooting in Minneapolis
What is the legal framework governing state prosecutions of federal officers? -
Lawfare Is Not Enough: The U.S. Needs Legal Statecraft
Legal statecraft moves beyond lawfare, giving the U.S. a strategic instrument to shape the environment instead of playing defense. -
The Fentanyl Executive Order and Domestic Military Deployments
Any attempt to authorize domestic military deployments by designating fentanyl a weapon of mass destruction rests on absurd legal theories. -
Lawfare Live: Trials of the Trump Administration, Jan. 9
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation targeting actions from President Trump. -
Rational Security: The “Caracas Like a Hurricane” Special Venezuela Edition
Scott Anderson sat down with Benjamin Wittes, Natalie Orpett, and Molly Roberts for a special deep-dive into the intervention in Venezuela. -
Congress Must Define ‘Unlawful Order’ Under Military Law
Without clear definitions, commanders risk issuing unlawful orders, and troops risk obeying them. -
The U.K.’s Plan for Electronic Eavesdropping Poses Cybersecurity Risks
The U.K. government’s latest attempt to access encrypted cloud backups could allow adversarial actors to gain access to sensitive data.
More Articles
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Lawfare Live: The Trials of the Trump Administration, March 27
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation surrounding the Trump administration. -
Does Product Liability Offer a Route Around Section 230?
Lawsuits against social media companies are addressing not only Section 230, but also product liability law and the First Amendment. -
Rational Security: The “Authentic Flavors, Real Fruit” Edition
Scott Anderson sat down with Molly Roberts, Tyler McBrien, and Renée DiResta to talk through the week’s big national security news stories.
