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The Lawfare Podcast: Eric Posner on ‘The Demagogue's Playbook'
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The Role of Federal Courts in Coronavirus-Related Immigration Detention Litigation
As the pandemic goes on, lawsuits in federal courts have proliferated across the country challenging the inadequate response of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to the spread of the coronavirus. -
Cascading Security Through the Internet of Things Supply Chain
The “internet of things” supply chain has been a channel for risk into our homes. We can use that same channel to push security back up through the supply chain. -
The United Nations and the Accidental Rise of Covert Intervention
The signing of the U.N. Charter 75 years ago has changed not only the number of wars between states, but how they have been fought. -
The Week that Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Today's Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
Trump Broke Law by Using Military Funding for Border Wall, Ninth Circuit Rules
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Federal Privacy Legislation Should Protect Civil Rights
Adapted from a June 2020 Brookings report, this is the third in a series of Lawfare posts on proposed federal privacy legislation. This piece addresses the role of civil rights in privacy legislation. -
ChinaTalk: Hong Kong's Protests One Year On
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The Justice Department’s Good Ideas for Platforms Needn’t Be Done Through Section 230 Reform
The Justice Department’s recently released plan to reform Section 230 has drawn predictably partisan reactions. But the report includes a couple of wise ideas. -
The Case Against EU Cyber Sanctions for the Bundestag Hack
Germany’s request for sanctions against Russia would mark the first time the EU cyber sanctions regime has been invoked. But is it wise for the EU to use that regime in the current case? -
The Lawfare Podcast: Hong Kong’s Protests One Year On
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Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
The Law of Classified Information: A Primer
How the U.S. government regulates its secrets. -
SCOTUS Upholds Expedited Removal of Undocumented Immigrants
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Fault Lines: Systemic Racism and National Security
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ChinaTalk: China-India Clashes: What Happens Next?
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The Lawfare Podcast: Whitney Phillips and Ryan Milner on Our Polluted Information Environment
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Wikileaks Founder Assange Charged in Superseding Indictment
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The U.S. Should Communicate in the Jus ad Bellum Lexicon to Strengthen Its Deterrence Posturing
Strategic messages that incorporate credible threats under jus ad bellum are often the best option to enhance deterrence signaling.
More Articles
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Why Gaza’s Aid Effort Will Fail Without Cash
Israel’s economic warfare and the hidden monetary and financial roots of Palestine’s humanitarian crisis. -
Lawfare Live: Trials of the Trump Administration, Dec. 19
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation targeting actions from President Trump. -
When AI Models Can Continually Learn, Will Our Regulations Be Able to Keep Up?
Regulation has already been hard enough for static AI models.
