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Our ‘Arbiters of Truth’ Podcast Series Has Its Own Feed!
You can now subscribe to our podcast about the information ecosystem. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Spotify Faces the Content Moderation Music
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What We Have and Haven’t Learned About Terrorism Financing
A review of Jessica Davis, “Illicit Money: Financing Terrorism in the 21st Century” (Lynne Rienner, 2021). -
The Chatter Podcast: China’s Hold on Hollywood with Erich Schwartzel
This week, Shane Harris talks with journalist Erich Schwartzel about one of the most intense arenas of the great power competition between the United States and China: the movies. -
Using the Law to Advance Oppression: How Kazakhstan Presents a Veneer of Due Process to Silence Opposition
The Kazakhstan Parliament recently approved a draft law—theoretically designed to protect children and prevent cyberbullying. But, in practice, the law allows the government, already infamous for its per... -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
A Survey of Recent Developments and Trends in Universal Jurisdiction
The legal principle of universal jurisdiction is increasingly being used to bring accountability for atrocity crimes across the world. An overview of recent developments sheds light on certain patterns t... -
The Lawfare Podcast: Universal Jurisdiction Cases
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Rational Security 2.0: The ‘Hockey With Guns’ Edition
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Lawfare Live: The Role of the 2022 Olympics in Chinese Politics
Join us Friday at 11 a.m. when we are joined by Professor Julian Ku of Hofstra University School of Law and Victor Cha, vice dean and D.S. Song professor of Government at Georgetown University, to discus... -
Ten Questions We Hope the Cyber Safety Review Board Answers—and Three It Should Ignore
The creation of an independent review board for cybersecurity will help defenders improve. -
Can a Congressional Committee Subpoena Members of Congress?
In this post, we offer a guide on the authority of a congressional committee to issue a subpoena to a sitting member of Congress—and the potential to have that subpoena enforced if the recipient defies it. -
Justice Department Charges Individuals for Attempting to Launder Billions in Stolen Bitcoin
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Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Congress Moves on China
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The Cyberlaw Podcast: The Ad-Based Internet: Is The Roof Caving In, Or Just A Few Rafters?
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War Powers and State Sovereign Immunity in Torres v. Texas Dep’t of Public Safety
The Torres decision will not only determine if protections are available to hundreds of thousands of veterans against employment discrimination but also could have broader ramifications for the war power... -
Defending Fire: A Need for Policy to Protect the Security of Open Source
The security of open-source development tools and infrastructure must be made a priority by federal cybersecurity policymakers. -
ChinaTalk: China's Wolf Warrior Diplomacy, Part 2
Author of "China's Civilian Army: The Making of Wolf Warrior Diplomacy" Peter Martin and Schwarzman scholar Jason Zhou return to take us from the young diplomats venturing out of China in the eighties to... -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion.
More Articles
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Putting Press Freedom to the Test
The FBI’s search on a Washington Post reporter’s home raises questions about the protections afforded to journalists in leak cases. -
The AI Preemption Executive Order’s BEAD Strategy Faces Steep Legal Hurdles
BEAD—a statute about deploying service and connecting locations—never mentions AI and lacks the clarity these interpretative canons require. -
Interpreting Claude’s Constitution
Anthropic’s guidelines for AI development offer a novel approach to training frontier models and, perhaps, shaping AI governance.
