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Tracking the U.S. Position on Gaza Through UN Security Council Resolutions
Though the resolutions did not result in meaningful change on the ground, they nonetheless signaled important U.S. diplomatic messages to Israel and the Security Council. -
Election Redos Are a Big Problem for Voter Rights—and Democracy
The alarming trend of election redos is bigger than any one race, county, or even state. -
Chatter: Confirmations for National Security Positions, with Arnold Punaro
Does the Senate confirmation process need to be updated? -
Lawfare Daily: Ryan Calo on Protecting Privacy Amid Advances in AI
Discussing the lack of privacy regulations around AI -
Russia’s Weaponization of Ukrainian Prisoner Exchanges
Russia is delaying the exchange of prisoners of war and using it as a tool to destabilize Ukraine. -
Hit Hard From Two Sides: The Special Counsel Rules After the Supreme Court Immunity and Cannon Classified Documents Decisions
Special counsel may go the way of independent counsels, in a blaze of controversy. -
Lawfare Daily: What the Immunity Decision Says About Proving the Case Against Trump
Discussing footnote 3 in the Supreme Court's presidential immunity decision. -
Filing a Complaint in the Islamic State
Newly released documents provide a glimpse of life under the Islamic State’s rule. -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
It Is Time to Act
We’ve known for 20 years it was coming. Is this the crisis too good to waste? -
Regulations Targeting Large Language Models Warrant Strict Scrutiny Under the First Amendment
U.S. lawmakers’ focus on AI models raises significant, even urgent, First Amendment questions—at least when applied to LLMs. -
How Chinese Illegal Gambling Infiltrates European Football
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
Moody v. NetChoice is a Blow to Silicon Valley’s Litigation Strategy
The era of overbroad facial challenges to tech regulation is over. -
Lawfare Daily: Cullen O’Keefe on "Chips for Peace”—AI Supply Chain Governance
How can the U.S. and its allies promote the safe development of AI? -
The CrowdStrike Outage and Market-Driven Brittleness
The outage is another consequence of companies’ sacrifice of resilience for expediency. -
Rational Security: The “Reboot the Reboot” Edition
This week, Scott Anderson and Alan Rozenshtein were joined by Eugenia Lostri and Molly Reynolds to discuss the week's big national security news: -
Lawfare Daily: Deplatforming Works, with David Lazer and Kevin Esterling
Discussing the effects of de-platforming users who had promoted misinformation. -
China is Reshaping the Maritime Legal Order
A review of Isaac B. Kardon, “China’s Law of the Sea: The New Rules of Maritime Order” (Yale University Press, 2023) -
Justice Dept. IG Finds No Misconduct by Trump, Others to Reduce Sentencing Recommendation for Roger Stone
The OIG concludes that, “the Department’s handling of the sentencing in the Stone case was highly unusual,” but did not violate “a law, rule, regulation, or Department policy.” -
What Makes a Pirate? Updating U.S. Piracy Law to Address an Age-Old Scourge
While U.S. piracy law has largely stagnated since 1820, international law has evolved. Now it’s time to catch up.
More Articles
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The Week That Was
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Call for Papers: The University of Texas at Austin Announces the 2025 "Bobby R. Inman Award" for Student Scholarship on Intelligence
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Tracing the Origins of a ‘New American Surveillance State’
A review of Byron Tau, "Means of Control: How the Hidden Alliance of Tech and Government Is Creating a New American Surveillance State" (Crown, 2024).