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New York State Judge Issues Order Preventing Trump Disclosures
In a May 8 order, Judge Juan Merchan prohibited Trump from posting materials and information from the case on social media. -
The Lawfare Podcast: El Salvador’s President Cracks Down on Gangs—and Democracy
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... -
A Digital Regulator Must Be Empowered to Address AI Issues
But not as the overseer of general-purpose AI. -
The Black Sea Grain Initiative and the Law of Treaties: A Response
The legal dimensions of the Black Sea Grain Initiative offer insights into the actual and potential roles of international law at times of crisis. -
The Misbegotten War Against Curation
A wide range of public grievances about curation simply don’t make sense. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Treaties and Dysfunctional Diplomacy
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. -
There Is No Getting Ahead of Disinformation Without Moving Past It
It’s time for democracies to stop focusing on disinformation. -
The Disconnect on Undersea Cable Security
Policymakers and cable industry insiders disagree about the threats to critical infrastructure and how to address them, but greater dialogue could help. -
President Biden Needs To Stop Commenting on Justice Department Investigations
The legitimacy of the Justice Department’s decision on Hunter Biden is hard enough to achieve without self-serving commentary from the president. -
Eight Fake Georgia Electors in 2020 Election Take Immunity Deals
Eight out of 16 electors who convened to vote for former President Donald Trump took immunity deals in the Fulton County investigation, and seven have sat for interviews. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Boys With a Bit Less Pride
Yesterday was verdict day for the Proud Boys. Mid-morning, the jury notified Judge Tim Kelly that it had reached a partial verdict, and that partial verdict was “guilty of seditious conspiracy” for four ... -
Debating the Public Debt in 1866 (and 2023)
The Congress that framed Section 4 of the Fourteenth Amendment thought the U.S. had to pay all public debts. Will Congress in 2023 agree? -
Jihadist Terrorism Encroaching on Coastal West Africa, Spilling Over From the Sahel
The U.S. recently laid out a security assistance package to help counter the growing jihadist threat in West Africa. But is the new initiative too little and too late? -
Lawfare Live: Proud Boys Verdict
Roger Parloff will sit down with Ben Wittes to discuss the trial, verdict, and its implications. -
Chatter: Private Equity and National Security with Brendan Ballou
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Rational Security: The 'Q Agone' Edition
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The Three-Body Problem: Platform Litigation and Absent Parties
Platform liability disputes typically involve three competing interests. So why are only two parties represented in litigation? -
CISOs, Don’t Ignore the FISA Section 702 Debate
Section 702 could be your next big cybersecurity tool. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Bridget Dooling and Mark Febrizio on Robotic Rulemaking
Alan Rozenshtein sat down with Bridget Dooling and Mark Febrizio to discuss how generative AI might intersect with rulemaking by federal agencies. -
ChinaTalk: Sen. Warner on the RESTRICT Act, AI, Bipartisanship on China and a New Era of Intelligence
More Articles
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A Terrorism of Vengeance
Understanding incels, school shooters, and the new category of terrorism, “nihilistic violent extremism.” -
The Situation: Why Can’t Kash Patel Shut Up?
On the FBI director’s penchant for commenting on pending matters. -
The Administration’s Drug Boat Strikes Are Crimes Against Humanity
Members of Congress are wrong to call the strikes war crimes in the absence of an armed conflict, but the strikes are serious crimes under international law.
