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How Can China Respond to the Coronavirus-Related Lawsuits Against It?
As a foreign sovereign state, China can take a more creative approach to responding—or not—to lawsuits filed against it in U.S. courts concerning the coronavirus. -
The D.C. Circuit Got History Wrong in its McGahn Decision
The majority fails to consider the relevant history of congressional oversight of the executive branch. -
Fourteen Places Have Passed Local Surveillance Laws. Here’s How They’re Doing.
These procedures show promise as a complement to judicial oversight, but cities could do more to stop vendors from shielding surveillance tools from scrutiny. -
Rational Security: The 'Cruel Summer' Edition
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Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
National Security Law Lectures
Lawfare’s Bobby Chesney and Matt Waxman have launched “The National Security Law Lectures”: a free series of lectures on an array of national security law topics. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Briefings Schmiefings
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Lawfare Turns Ten
A decade of hard national security choices. -
Congress Has Broad Power to Structure the Military—and It Should Use It
The Constitution gives Congress a broad, and underappreciated, power to structure the armed forces, assign duties to offices and regulate military chains of command. -
TechTank: Congressman David Cicilline on Why We Need a Glass-Steagall Act for the Internet
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Who Is the New Leader of Islamic State-Khorasan Province?
Shahab al-Muhajir inherits a weakened organization, but may benefit from a background that sets him outside of some local disputes. -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
What’s Going On With the Postal Service?
A deep dive into the embattled agency. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Election Anxieties and the U.S. Postal Service with Kevin Kosar and Anne Joseph O’Connell
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The Week That Will Be
Lawfare's weekly round-up of event announcements and employment opportunities. -
The Importance of Giving Reasons (Even in Secret)
The director of national intelligence has decided to curtail in-person briefings to Congress about election security. Congress should push back. -
The Dynamics of Japan’s “Armed Attack Initiation” Doctrine and Anticipatory Self-Defense
How has the debate over pre-emptive strike capabilities been legally framed in Japan? What are its implications for U.S. national security policy? -
Barr’s Campaign Against Independent Expertise Claims Another Victim
Brad Wiegmann’s removal as head of the National Security Division’s policy office is a major loss for the Department of Justice. -
The National Security Law Podcast: What Would Robert Jackson Do?
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Persistent Aggrandizement? Israel's Cyber Defense Architecture
The Israeli equivalent to Defend Forward is far less regulated than its U.S. parallel, and that the Israeli version of Persistent Engagement at home allows domestic action and harnesses the private secto...
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The Week That Was
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
The Situation: A Bove the Law II
What to do about the Senate’s confirmation of a lawless judge -
The Psychology of a New Obedience Paradigm
A review of Emilie A. Caspar, “Just Following Orders: Atrocities and the Brain Science of Obedience” (Cambridge University Press, 2024).