Latest in Highlights
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The Lawfare Podcast: Are Big Sanctions Coming for a Chinese Tech Company?
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Return of the Angry Political Man
Bill Barr volunteers his disturbing view of John Durham’s mission. -
Has the Time for an EU-U.S. Agreement on E-Evidence Come and Gone?
A legislative deadlock in Brussels risks the future of U.S.-EU negotiations. -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
Drone Strikes and Evidence-Based Counterterrorism
An appreciation of the effects of targeted strikes—as well as legal and ethical assessments of them—should guide decisions about whether, when, and where to conduct strikes. -
Chatter: The Secrets of Gay Washington with Jamie Kirchick
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The Lawfare Podcast: Bringing in the Content Moderation Auditors
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Turns Out It Is Not 85 Percent
A recently published paper from three George Washington University students refutes a commonly cited statistic about ownership of critical infrastructure and offers a more accurate portrayal of public an... -
Today’s Headlines and Commentary
Lawfare’s daily roundup of national security news and opinion. -
Foreign Equities and Informational Restraints on U.S. Prosecutors
Recent developments allowing federal criminal enforcers access to foreign evidence without gatekeeping by foreign states will, if not attended to, increase the likelihood of friction when U.S. prosecutio... -
The Cyberlaw Podcast: Silicon Valley Speech Suppression Is Going To The Supreme Court
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First Amendment Absolutism and Florida’s Social Media Law
The Eleventh Circuit’s opinion striking down most of Florida’s controversial social media law mostly gets the First Amendment right but also shortchanges the important government interests at stake.


