-
The Cyberlaw Podcast: Going Deep on Deep Fakes—Plus a Bonus Interview with Rob Silvers on the Cyber Safety Review Board.
-
Water Wars: The Philippines Calls for a South China Sea Paradigm Shift
The Philippines continues to resist China’s territorial claims; Presidents Biden and Xi meet in California; China and the U.S. reopen stalled military communications; and more. -
The Lawfare Podcast: War Powers and the Latest U.S. Intervention in Yemen with Brian Finucane, Jack Goldsmith, and Matt Gluck
How is the Biden administration legally justifying its air strikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen? -
ChinaTalk: Taiwan Election Results and Implications for Beijing
-
The NetChoice Cases Aren't About Discrimination
Texas and Florida are telling the Supreme Court that their social media laws are like civil rights laws prohibiting discrimination against minority groups. They’re wrong. -
House Republicans Release Draft Impeachment Articles Against Mayorkas
The articles accuse Mayorkas of “willful and systemic refusal to comply with the law” and “breach of public trust.” -
The Lawfare Podcast: Discussing FinCEN with Director Andrea Gacki
What has been the evolution of FinCEN? -
Governor Abbott’s Perilous Effort at Constitutional Realignment
Texas’s arguments have dangerous federalism implications. -
The United States Needs a New Way to Think About Cyber
A pair of recent cyberattacks demonstrate how adversaries are changing their strategies. -
The Lawfare Podcast, Trump's Trials and Tribulations: What Is Going On in Fulton County?
Listen to this week's episode of Trump's Trials and Tribulations -
The Texas Border and Insurrection Act Reform
The Texas border imbroglio reveals the need for and challenges of Insurrection Act reform. -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
The International Court of Justice's Interim Measures to Prevent Genocide in Gaza
The court has in effect ordered what the U.S. has been pushing for all along. The U.S. should now support compliance. -
Making Sense of the ICJ's Provisional Measures in South Africa v. Israel
What the court ordered of Israel, where the judges came down, and what’s next for South Africa’s case alleging Israel’s violation of the Genocide Convention in Gaza -
ICJ Issues Provisional Measures in South Africa v. Israel
The court ordered Israel to take all measures to prevent genocide in Gaza, but stopped short of calling on Israel to suspend its military operations. -
Smile! You’ve Been Sanctioned + Microsoft’s Midnight Blizzard Is Cold, Dark, and Insecure
The latest edition of the Seriously Risky Business cybersecurity newsletter, now on Lawfare. -
Wealth on the Shelf: The U.S. Extended Continental Shelf Clarification
Why the United States announced its exclusive right over the resources in a region twice the size of California, and its implications. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Government Use of Open-Source Information
What is the status of government surveillance of open source social media? -
The War Powers Resolution and the Counter-Houthi Mission
The Biden Administration’s options for skirting a War Powers Resolution deadline in its Houthi attacks -
The Russian Hack of Microsoft: Lessons for Cybersecurity
The rudimentary hack suggests a significant impact from new SEC disclosure rules and continued impunity for foreign hackers.
More Articles
-
Rational Security: The “Doodle Ordinance” Edition
Scott Anderson, Natalie Orpett, Tyler McBrien, and Daniel Byman talked through the week’s big national security news. -
Why OpenAI’s Corporate Structure Matters to AI Development
OpenAI's potential corporate shift from its “capped-profit” model may conflict with its AGI-for-humanity mission. -
Trump’s 'Emergencies' Are Pretexts for Undermining the Constitution
The president’s abusive invocations of emergency powers threaten American liberty and the constitutional system.