National Security, Technology & Law Working Group

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Analysis and Commentary

Successful Student Online Legal Writing

by Jack Goldsmithvia Lawfare
Thursday, October 27, 2016

I am teaching a seminar at Yale Law School this term, and the students there asked me—based on my experiences with Lawfare—to give a talk about student online writing. (I am also teaching a how-to “laboratory” at Harvard Law School for students who want to write for Lawfare.)

Analysis and Commentary

Rational Security: The "Strange Bedfellows" Edition

by Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Thursday, October 27, 2016

Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump enter the home stretch of the presidential campaign. Hackers take down a key component of the Internet in an unprecedented attack. And WikiLeaks makes some unexpected alliances.

Analysis and Commentary

What’s The Matter With (Visiting) Kansas?

by Nora Ellingsen, Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Here’s a free suggestion for President Obama and to FBI Director James Comey, for that matter: Take a trip to Kansas.

Analysis and Commentary

The Next President’s Fight Against Terror

by Jack Goldsmithvia Lawfare
Wednesday, October 12, 2016

That is the title of a conference Ben and I are participating in next week in D.C. at New America, in conjunction with Arizona State University's Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law and the McCain Institute.

Blank Section (Placeholder)EssaysAnalysis and Commentary

The International Legal Dynamics Of Encryption

by Ashley Deeksvia Aegis Paper Series
Tuesday, October 11, 2016

To date there has been little international coordinated action to address encryption, though interest is growing. This paper looks at encryption through five different international lenses: human rights, law enforcement, intelligence, economics, and export controls. 

Grab 'Em By The Constitution: Trump And The Justice Department

by Benjamin Wittes
Monday, October 10, 2016

I hate to say "I told you so," but gosh, I told you so. A few months ago, during Trump's ascendancy in the GOP primaries, I wrote a piece about his likely impact on and abuse of the powers of the U.S. Department of Justice.

Featured

The DNC Hack And (The Lack Of) Deterrence

by Jack Goldsmithvia Lawfare
Sunday, October 9, 2016

What Options Does the U.S. Have After Accusing Russia of Hacks?, asks the headline in the NYT story yesterday by David Sanger and Nicole Perlroth. To ask this question is to reveal once again the ineffective or non-existent U.S. cyber-deterrence policy. 

The Trump National Security Paradox

by Benjamin Wittes
Friday, September 30, 2016

To my knowledge, the first explicit argument—at least by a prominent member of the national security community—that the man who would become the Republican standard bearer for President in 2016 poses a threat to U.S. national security was advanced on this site by John Bellinger last December.

Hoover Book Soiree, Reminder: Rosa Brooks On "How Everything Became War And The Military Became Everything"

by Jack Goldsmith, Benjamin Wittes
Wednesday, September 28, 2016

The next in our series of book soirees at the Hoover Institution's Washington Office will take place on Wednesday, when Ben interviews Rosa Brooks about her new book: How Everything Became War and the Military Became Everything: Tales from the Pentagon.

Blank Section (Placeholder)EssaysAnalysis and Commentary

Decryption Mandates And Global Internet Freedom

by Adam I. Kleinvia Aegis Paper Series
Monday, September 26, 2016

The potential international effects of a domestic decryption mandate have been a significant factor in the debate over U.S. encryption policy.  Some fear that a U.S. decryption mandate would empower authoritarian regimes and would clash with the United States’ international Internet-freedom agenda.

Pages

Aegis on Lawfare

 
Aegis explores legal and policy issues at the intersection of technology and national security.  Published in partnership with Lawfare, it features long-form essays of the working group, examines major new books in the field, and carries podcasts and videos or the working group’s events in Washington and Stanford.

Security by the Book Podcasts

The Security by the Book podcast series features monthly interviews with authors of important, new national security-oriented books and publications.

The Jean Perkins Foundation Working Group on National Security, Technology, and Law brings together national and international specialists with broad interdisciplinary expertise to analyze how technology affects national security and national security law and how governments can use that technology to defend themselves, consistent with constitutional values and the rule of law.

The group will focus on a broad range of interests, from surveillance to counterterrorism to the dramatic impact that rapid technological change—digitalization, computerization, miniaturization, and automaticity—are having on national security and national security law. Topics include cybersecurity, the rise of drones and autonomous weapons systems, and the need for and dangers of state surveillance. The group’s output will also be published on the Lawfare blog, which covers the merits of the underlying legal and policy debates of actions taken or contemplated to protect the nation and the nation’s laws and legal institutions.

Jack Goldsmith is the chair of the Jean Perkins Foundation Working Group on National Security, Technology, and Law.