-
Reading the Senate Rules of Impeachment Litigation: A Response to Hurd and Wittes
The Senate rules do not require a full trial, nor do they equate “removal” with “disqualification.” -
The Lawfare Podcast Bonus Edition: The House Intelligence Committee vs. the House Judiciary Committee with No Bull
-
Winter 2019 Supplement for 'Bradley, Deeks, & Goldsmith, Foreign Relations Law: Cases and Materials'
Summer 2019 Supplement for Bradley, Deeks, & Goldsmith, Foreign Relations Law: Cases and Materials (6th ed. 2017) is now available on Lawfare. -
Livestream: House Intelligence Committee Presents Impeachment Findings to Judiciary Committee
-
The Battle of the Impeachment Reports: Do the Parties Disagree About the Facts?
Congressional Democrats and Republicans actually agree on a fair bit of the fact pattern at issue in the impeachment inquiry. -
How the Schiff Report Deals With Disinformation
The House Intelligence Committee report on impeachment engages minimally with the conspiracy theories propagated by the president’s defenders. -
The NBA and China’s Predatory Liberalism
The NBA, and the world, should take a firmer stance against China's use of economic coercion to try to silence critical international voices. -
House Judiciary Committee Report on Impeachment
-
What Congress Should Consider in Drafting Articles of Impeachment
The House Judiciary Committee should take a prosecutor’s perspective, considering what goal impeachment will serve in drafting articles. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Cybersecurity Futures
-
The Week that Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Election Victory Gives New Momentum to Hong Kong Democracy Movement
Lawfare’s biweekly roundup of U.S.-China technology policy news. -
Today's Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national-security news and opinions. -
Defining a Theory of ‘Bribery’ for Impeachment
If adopted by the House of Representatives, the theory that President Trump engaged in bribery by pushing Ukraine for an investigation into Burisma could have consequences for the separation of powers. ... -
The Cyberlaw Podcast: Ethical Algorithms with Michael Kearns and Aaron Roth
-
NYU School of Law Hosts Bipartisan Event on Congress’ Role in National Security
-
Britain Goes to the Polls in a High-Stakes Election
Next week’s vote will be a decisive moment in the polarizing Brexit debate, with the outcome indicating support for a divorce deal with the European Union, a second referendum, or continued stalemate. -
Two Russian Nationals Indicted in Connection with Hacking Schemes
-
Today's Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national-security news and opinions. -
Workshop Report: The Transatlantic Dialogue on Military Cyber Operations-Amsterdam
The Strauss Center at UT-Austin has published a report summarizing the dialogue at the “Transatlantic Dialogue on Military Cyber Operations,” which occurred in Amsterdam in August 2019.
More Articles
-
Scaling Laws: Anthropic's Gabriel Nicholas Analyzes AI Agents
-
Lessons Learned From the TikTok Saga
I got the law right but the institutions wrong. -
Lawfare Daily: How Social Media Threatens Democracy, with Rick Pildes
Discussing the link between social media and threats to democracy.
