-
The Lawfare Podcast: Bulelani Jili on Africa’s Demand for and Adoption of Chinese Surveillance Technologies
Countries across Africa are procuring and employing surveillance tools from China. This trend is a product of China’s diplomatic strategy, its technological ambitions, and growing corporate power and rea... -
The Unfortunate Irony of Meta’s EU Troubles and the Case of TikTok
If EU concerns about Meta sound like déjà vu to U.S. ears, they should. -
703 Ways Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Conduct Bears No Resemblance to Hillary Clinton’s Emails
Insisting on similarity is a kind of lie to make Clinton’s conduct look worse than it was, to make Trump’s look more benign than it was, or both at the same time. -
The Aftermath, Episode 6: Going Dark
In the final episode of Season 1, we examine the hidden activity of the Jan. 6 Committee during the year between its first hearing and its second. -
Counterterrorism Jenga
The shift to "over-the-horizon" operations has removed important building blocks in U.S. counterterrorism strategy. -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Lawfare No Bull: The House Judiciary Committee on the Durham Report
-
The Lawfare Podcast: Large Language Negligence
As large language models like ChatGPT play an increasingly important role in our society, there will no doubt be examples of them causing harm. Alan Rozenshtein discusses with Jane Bambauer. -
Can Law Adapt to Meet the Climate Crisis?
Addressing the legal crisis lurking within the climate crisis. -
A New Kill Chain Approach to Disrupting Online Threats
If EU concerns about Meta sound like déjà vu to U.S. ears, they should. -
Chatter: Covering the January 6th Trials with Roger Parloff
-
The Lawfare Podcast: Richard Gowan on the U.S. Push for UN Security Council Reform
-
Rational Security: The 'Even Stephan' Edition
This week, Alan, Quinta, and Scott were joined by UVA Law Professor Paul Stephan to talk through the close-calls in this week's national security news. -
What If It Were Illegal to Transfer Personal Data From the European Union to the United States?
A recent European decision does not go exactly that far, but it imperils such data transfers, at least until stronger controls over U.S. surveillance law are in place and recognized as adequate by the Eu... -
Confusing Judicial Reform With Unleashing Extremism
The debate over judicial activism is the wrong lens through which to consider the current Israeli fight over its judiciary. The right lens is the restraint of authoritarianism and religious radicalism. -
Can Biden Sidestep Congress on an Iran Nuclear Deal?
The Biden administration has a plausible but not clinching argument for avoiding the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act if the agreement is unwritten. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Protests, the Police, and the Press
-
The Cyberlaw Podcast: Yet Another Synthetic Moral Panic Over Privacy
-
The Presidential Records Act, Clinton's Socks, and Trump's Boxes
What is the PRESIDENTIAL RECORDS ACT? What is the CLINTON SOCKS CASE? Do they TOTALLY EXONERATE Donald Trump? -
The Lawfare Podcast: Stephanie Pell and Brian Kalt on How the Trump Indictment Will Affect the Trump Campaign and the Potential Trump Presidency
More Articles
-
Rational Security: The “Botanical Bros” Edition
Scott Anderson, Alan Rozenshtein, and Natalie Orpett talk through the week’s big national security news. -
No, Native American Citizenship Does Not Support Limits on Birthright Citizenship
This defense misconstrues both the Constitution and the Supreme Court decisions relying on it. -
Lawfare Daily: Zachary Price on Judging in a Divided Republic
Discussing constituional symmetry.