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Scaling Laws: Lawyering on the Frontier with Janel Thamkul
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Europe Wants to Wean Itself Off U.S. Tech
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
Lawfare Daily: How Escalations in Lebanon May Prolong the Iran War, with Joel Braunold
Discussing recent escalations between Israel and Lebanon. -
Lawfare Live: The Trials of the Trump Administration, June 12
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation surrounding the Trump administration. -
Introducing RAGtime
A Lawfare research platform now available in beta -
The Paranoid Style in American Oversight, Part II
The criticism of the techniques used in the FBI’s investigation of the false electors plot, much like the critiques of how it was opened, do not bear scrutiny. -
Syria’s State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation Is Blocking Its Recovery
The United States has the authority and the justification to lift the last vestiges of U.S. sanctions. What it appears to lack is the will. -
Lawfare Daily: Why Immigrants are Challenging the Conditions of their Detention
Breaking down the landscape of immigration detention litigation. -
When Compliance Becomes the Offense
Beijing’s new rules make standard U.S. sanctions compliance illegal in China. Washington and allies must build structural defenses before a multinational firm is prosecuted. -
Why Callais Doesn’t Justify Court-Packing
To the extent Callais is a problem, it can be better addressed by steps such as banning gerrymandering. -
Lawfare Daily: Congressional Resolutions to End the War in Iran
What can Congress do to direct the president to end the war in Iran? -
Russia’s Kinetic Destruction of Ukraine’s Cultural Memory
Russia’s strike on Kyiv’s Chornobyl Museum was more than an attack on a civilian or cultural site; it targeted historical memory itself. -
Scaling Laws, Radical Optionality: Governing Transformative AI, with Christoph Winter and Charlie Bullock
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Killing Khamenei
How one strike rewrote the law of leadership decapitation. -
Lawfare Daily: Lies, Laws, and Campaigns
How can lies be disincentivize on the campaign trail? -
Dispatch: Move Fast and Break Things and Nobody Has Standing
No court can stop President Trump’s ballroom, the government says in National Trust for Historic Preservation v. NPS. -
What Congressional Resolutions Mean for the War in Iran
They may lack the force of law, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have legal effects. -
Beyond Glasswing: From Managing to Promoting Access
Managing access to frontier AI buys defenders a head start. But without triage, translation, and distribution, that window will be wasted. -
Lawfare Daily: The Trials of the Trump Administration, June 5
Listen to the June 5 livestream as a podcast. -
The Counterterrorism Challenge in Afghanistan’s Borderlands
Where returnees face humanitarian shortfalls, armed groups see opportunities.
More Articles
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At a Mosque in San Diego, Trump’s Counterterrorism Strategy Falls Flat
The administration’s strategy trades an accurate assessment of the threat landscape for political rhetoric. -
Lawfare Live: The Trials of the Trump Administration, June 26
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation surrounding the Trump administration. -
The Missing Resistance in China’s AI Debate
As Washington negotiates AI guardrails with Beijing, it must understand why the AI debate in China is so quiet: control, not consent.
