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A.I. Programs Write for Lawfare on Judge Cannon's Ruling in the Mar-A-Lago Case
Artificial intelligence is heralded as the next big thing, threatening to replace all kinds of writers the internet over. Can it replace Lawfare editors and contributors? -
The Lawfare Podcast: Rick Hasen and Nate Persily on Replatforming Trump on Social Media
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Chatter: Reassessing Reagan's Foreign Policy with Will Inboden
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Deferral and De Facto Authorities: The ICC Prosecutor’s Assessment of Afghanistan’s Deferral Request
The Office of the Prosecutor’s analysis of the merits of Afghanistan’s 2020 request to defer the ICC’s investigation not only underscores its own views of the law applicable to deferral requests but also... -
Unpacking The 2020 Portland Chaos
Reactions to the unredacted version of the Department of Homeland Security’s 2021 Report on the 2020 Portland riots, released in October 2022. -
The Lawfare Podcast: Riana Pfefferkorn on End-to-End Encryption for iPhone Backups to iCloud
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Rational Security: The 'It Has a Kilt!' Edition
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ChinaTalk: Nuclear Fusion: Why We Can't Have Nice Things
The latest episode of ChinaTalk. -
The National Security Law Podcast: Not *That* George Clinton
The latest episode of the National Security Law Podcast. -
TechTank: Technology Adoption in Africa: Current and Future Use Cases for Development
The latest episode TechTank. -
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...