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TechTank: How Much Influence Do Private Firms Have Over Space Policy?
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AI-Enhanced Social Engineering Will Reshape the Cyber Threat Landscape
The proliferation of artificial intelligence tools enables bad actors to conduct deceptive attacks more cheaply, quickly, and effectively. -
The World’s Underground Bankers
Chinese money laundering organizations have become key facilitators of global illicit finance, threatening U.S. national security. -
Lawfare Daily: Trials of the Trump Administration, May 2
Listen to the May 2 livestream. -
The Revenge of the JCPOA
The Trump administration is confronting a familiar problem: How can the United States prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon? -
The Week That Was
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
The Situation: An Exceptional Nation
Thoughts on American exceptionalism. -
Security Vendors Are Constantly Being Attacked
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
How History Repeats Itself: Gloss and the Foreign Relations Constitution
A review of Curtis Bradley, “Historical Gloss and Foreign Affairs: Constitutional Authority in Practice” (Harvard University Press, 2024) -
Lawfare Daily: Social Security, the ‘Death Master File,’ and Immigration Enforcement
Why is the Social Security Administration working with ICE? -
The Situation: 100 Days, 100 Acts of Menace and Inanity
An impressionistic painting. -
The Authoritarian Risks of AI Surveillance
AI-powered surveillance facilitates authoritarianism across the globe. Here’s how courts and lawmakers could stop it from happening here. -
Lawfare Live: Trials of the Trump Administration, May 2
Join the Lawfare team at 4 pm ET for a discussion of the litigation targeting actions from President Trump. -
Oral Argument Summary: CC/Devas (Mauritius) Ltd. v. Antrix Corp. Ltd.
The question at issue: whether a foreign sovereign must have minimum contacts with the U.S. before a court can assert personal jurisdiction over it. -
Lawfare Daily: The Crisis in Kashmir
Discussing the recent India-Pakistan conflict. -
Secretary Hegseth Ends WPS Program Despite Joint Staff Support
A Joint Staff memorandum reviewed by Lawfare casts doubt on Secretary Hegseth’s claim that troops “hate” implementation of the Women, Peace, and Security Act. -
ChinaTalk: Will Everyone Get Nukes Now?
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Border Militarization Blurs the Distinction Between ‘Policing’ Immigration and ‘Combating’ Immigrants
NSPM-4, President Trump’s order on the military’s “mission for sealing the Southern Border,” obscures the fine-grained limits that ought to clearly and unambiguously regulate lethal force. -
Can the U.S. Government Compel States to Enforce Immigration Law?
Trump’s efforts to force state cooperation on immigration raise pressing questions about the constitutional limits of federal authority. -
Lawfare Daily: Andrew Bakaj on Whistleblowing and DOGE’s Activities at the NLRB
Discussing the declaration from a NLRB whistleblower.
More Articles
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The Week That Was
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
The Second Circuit’s Halkbank III Decision
The Second Circuit ruled that the bank is not protected by common law foreign sovereign immunity—unless the Supreme Court decides otherwise. -
The House Reconciliation Bill’s AI Preemption Clearly Violates the Byrd Rule
It strains credulity to claim that broad preemption of state AI regulation for the next decade is a necessary term or condition of an appropriation of $500 million for the Department of Commerce to updat...