-
What Comes After the Loss and Damage Fund for Responsibility and Repair in a Climate-Disrupted World?
A look at the lead-up to the creation of the historic loss and damage fund, what problems remain to be hashed out, and the state of climate justice efforts both in and out of the UNFCCC regime. -
The Case for War Torts—for Ukraine and Beyond
There is currently no international legal regime that compensates civilians whose property, bodies, or lives are destroyed in armed conflicts. Russia’s war in Ukraine might provide the needed political i... -
Ask Lawfare: A Special Year-End Edition of the Lawfare Podcast
It's the end of a very busy year. And we suspect that people have questions. Lawfare is here to answer them. -
The Lawfare Podcast: 'Corrupt Obstruction' Before the D.C. Circuit
-
The Cyberlaw Podcast: ChatGPT Successfully Imitates a Talented Sociopath with Too Many Lawyers
The latest episode of the Cyberlaw Podcast. -
The U.N. Security Council Adopts a Standing Humanitarian “Carve-Out”
The Security Council’s latest resolution is a watershed development for humanitarian assistance, spurred by years of research and advocacy, and will need to be monitored closely going forward to assess i... -
The Right Time For Chip Export Controls
The United States’ new chip export controls on China launched an unprecedented strategy to constrain China’s technological ambitions. Despite some flaws, the Biden administration got the scope, scale, an... -
The Week That Will Be
Lawfare's weekly roundup of event announcements and employment opportunities. -
The Lawfare Podcast: A Member of Meta’s Oversight Board Discusses the Board’s New Decision
-
Section 308’s Overbroad Restrictions on Post-Intelligence Community Jobs
Congress was right to legislate in response to Project Raven, but its solution limiting the jobs that intelligence community members can take after leaving the government is overbroad. With luck, the int... -
A Foiled Coup Attempt in Germany and the Danger of Conspiracy Theories
The alleged Reichsbürger coup uncovered on Dec. 7 is a symptom of a larger problem in German society, as years of agitation by conspiratorial and far-right actors have frayed parts of German society and ... -
Oath Keepers Leaders Were Found Guilty, but the Threat of Antigovernment Extremism Remains
Stewart Rhodes' conviction will further undermine the organization he led, but sympathizers have other options. -
The Week That Was: All of Lawfare in One Post
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Alan Rozenshtein Says the Slope Isn’t That Slippery
-
Lawfare Crossword Puzzle Answer
Your answer to the Lawfare crossword. -
Accountability at the U.S.-Africa Summit
As it currently stands, the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit is poised to put justice for victims and accountability for atrocity crimes on the backburner and perpetuate trends that stagnate progress on the co... -
Extreme Facts Make Easy Law: D.C. Circuit Appears Ready to Issue a Narrow Ruling Against Civil Immunity for Donald Trump
An interesting inversion of the traditional roles played by lawyers and judges happened at the D.C. Circuit on Wednesday in Blassingame v. Trump. -
Lawfare No Bull: D.C. Circuit Hears Arguments in Blassingame v. Trump
-
ChinaTalk: Semis 101 with Asianometry and Fabricated Knowledge
The latest episode of ChinaTalk. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Dissecting the Oral Arguments in Moore v. Harper
More Articles
-
The Week That Was
Your weekly summary of everything on the site. -
Amid Federal Push for AI Innovation, Who Will Look Out for Consumers?
With AI innovation bound to accelerate under new federal policies, state attorneys general emerge as vital consumer protectors. -
Don’t Use Shutdown Plans to Slash the Federal Workforce
The administration’s misguided attempt to lay off employees who aren’t excepted from shutdowns.