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Lawfare Daily: Richard Albert on Constitutional Resilience Amid Political Tumult
What helps constitutions withstand political pressure? -
Rational Security: The “Make Daguerreotypes Great Again” Edition
This week, Alan Rozenshtein and Quinta Jurecic sat down with Molly Reynolds and Kevin Frazier to talk about the week’s big developments. -
A Global Treaty to Fight Cybercrime—Without Combating Mercenary Spyware
The UN’s new cybercrime treaty is poised to become a vehicle for complicity in the global mercenary spy trade. -
Lawfare Daily: A Conversation with an Exiled Venezuelan Opposition Leader
Discussing the results of the recent Venezuela presidential election. -
Technology Controls to Contain China’s Quantum Ambitions Are Here
They are neither effective nor desirable. -
Oversight Committee Recommends Suspension of Jeffrey Clark’s D.C. Bar License
The committee says Clark should lose his license to practice law in D.C. for two years. -
Privacy Protections of the Stored Communications Act Gutted by California Court
A California court of appeal has eviscerated statutory privacy protections that prevent providers from disclosing the content of user communications. -
Climate Migration Comes Home
A review of Abrahm Lustgarten, “On the Move” (Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2024) -
Lawfare Daily: Shoba Pillay and Jennifer Lee on the Dismissal of Charges Against the SolarWinds Corporation and Timothy Brown
Why did a district court judge dismiss some of the SEC's charges against SolarWinds? -
Student Contributor Program Applications Are Now Open
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Secretary Austin's Fateful GTMO Plea Deals Decision
The history of torture-tainted cases in the military commissions demonstrates the near impossibility of obtaining death penalty judgments. -
The Limits of the ICJ Advisory Opinion on Israel’s Occupation and the West Bank
By not fully engaging with history, geopolitics, and the charge of apartheid, the court failed to fully engage with the complexity of the situation.