Latest in Podcasts and Multimedia
-
Chatter: ‘Special Military Operations’ Against the Russians with Benjamin Wittes
-
The Lawfare Podcast: Inside the Capitol Police’s Intelligence Dysfunction
The House’s select committee on Jan. 6 may have wound down its work at the end of December 2022, but questions about why law enforcement, including the U.S. Capitol Police, were unprepared for the possib... -
The Lawfare Podcast: The Shadow Docket
In recent years, the Supreme Court's non-merits “shadow docket” has become a topic of contestation and controversy, especially the Court's emergency orders rulings on issues ranging from immigration to a... -
The Cyberlaw Podcast: EUthanizing AI
-
The Lawfare Podcast: The Law of the Sea in the Age of Climate Change
Managing Editor Tyler McBrien sat down with Surabhi Ranganathan to discuss how international law must adapt to better address our uncertain climate future. -
Chatter: Politicians and White House Plumbers with Olivia Nuzzi
-
The Lawfare Podcast: Brian Fishman on Violent Extremism and Platform Liability
Earlier this year, Brian Fishman published a fantastic paper with Brookings thinking through how technology platforms grapple with terrorism and extremism, and how any reform to Section 230 must allow th... -
The Lawfare Podcast: Fionnuala Ní Aoláin on Regulating Spyware
To talk about spyware and its potential regulation under international law Senior Editor Alan Rozenshtein spoke with Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, the Robina Chair in Law, Public Policy, and Society at the Univer... -
Rational Security: The 'You Hear That, Mr. Anderson? That Is the Sound of Inevitability. Goodbye, Mr. Anderson' Edition
-
The Lawfare Podcast: Ali Breland on Germany’s Neo-Nazi Resurgence
Lawfare Managing Editor Tyler McBrien sat down with Ali Breland, a reporter at Mother Jones covering internet disinformation, technology, race, and politics, to discuss his article on Germany's neo-Nazi ... -
The Cyberlaw Podcast: How Worried Should We Be About “Existential” AI Risk?
-
The Lawfare Podcast: El Salvador’s President Cracks Down on Gangs—and Democracy
To understand the situation in El Salvador, Lawfare Senior Editor Quinta Jurecic spoke with Manuel Meléndez-Sánchez, a PhD candidate in Political Science at Harvard University who has written about Presi... -
The Lawfare Podcast: Treaties and Dysfunctional Diplomacy
To assess the causes and impact of the United States’ declining use of treaties, Jack Goldsmith sat down with Jeffrey Peake, a political scientist at Clemson University. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Boys With a Bit Less Pride
Yesterday was verdict day for the Proud Boys. Mid-morning, the jury notified Judge Tim Kelly that it had reached a partial verdict, and that partial verdict was “guilty of seditious conspiracy” for four ... -
Lawfare Live: Proud Boys Verdict
Roger Parloff will sit down with Ben Wittes to discuss the trial, verdict, and its implications. -
Chatter: Private Equity and National Security with Brendan Ballou
-
Rational Security: The 'Q Agone' Edition
-
The Lawfare Podcast: Bridget Dooling and Mark Febrizio on Robotic Rulemaking
Alan Rozenshtein sat down with Bridget Dooling and Mark Febrizio to discuss how generative AI might intersect with rulemaking by federal agencies. -
ChinaTalk: Sen. Warner on the RESTRICT Act, AI, Bipartisanship on China and a New Era of Intelligence
-
The Lawfare Podcast: Jim Dempsey and Jonathan Spring on Adversarial Machine Learning and Cybersecurity
Risks associated with the rapid development and deployment of artificial intelligence are getting the attention of lawmakers. But one issue that may not be getting adequate attention by policymakers or b...
