Editor’s Note: This piece has been adapted from a forthcoming article in the Stanford Law Review. Editor’s Note: Editor’s Note: This piece has been adapted from a forthcoming
article in the [...]
Editor’s Note: This piece has been adapted from a forthcoming article in the Stanford Law Review. Editor’s Note: Editor’s Note: This piece has been adapted from a forthcoming
article in the [...]
Editor’s Note: The following is adapted from an address given at Columbia Law School on May 4, 2023, at a conference on “The Battle over the Israeli Judiciary” put on
by Columbia Law School and Academic Exchange. [...]
At the United Nations, Russia's obstruction of efforts to respond to its invasion of Ukraine is finally sparking serious interest in an issue that has long simmered in the
background of global politics: reform of the UN Security Council to make it a larger and more inclusive body. [...]
The Biden administration might soon reach an agreement of sorts with Iran that would seek, among other things, to curb Iran’s nuclear weapons program. A major complication
is that the 2015 Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act (INARA) requires the president to “transmit” an “agreement” relating to the nuclear program of Iran to [...]
With the 2024 election campaign around the corner and public interest in artificial intelligence (AI) at fever pitch, policymakers, business leaders, and researchers have voiced
concern about AI-enabled influence operations interfering in the democratic process. [...]
Hunter Biden has pled guilty to two misdemeanor charges of willful failure to pay income taxes—amounting to roughly $1 million—and will likely enter into a probationary
agreement for possessing a firearm while being an unlawful user of controlled substances, according to a June 20 filing in the U.S. [...]
Recent weeks have seen a flurry of investigative activity on Capitol Hill, including probes by House committees into Hunter Biden and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s
New York indictment of former president Donald Trump, demands by Senate committees for information about Supreme Court ethics rules and gifts received by Justice [...]
Last November, President Trump became candidate Trump when he formally announced his campaign to retake the White House in 2024. And when, earlier this month, the Department
of Justice indicted Trump over his unauthorized possession of classified documents, it gave him another title: defendant Trump. [...]
Editor’s Note: Sanctions are an important U.S. and allied policy instrument, but one that often fails to achieve the most ambitious policy objectives. Using Russia as an
example, MIT’s Caileigh Glenn assesses the different ways that targets of sanctions can push back and examines the limits of sanctions and how they might be made [...]
On June 16, Special Counsel Jack Smith submitted a motion for a protective order limiting disclosure of discovery information, as well as the proposed protective order, in
the case of United States of America v. Donald J. Trump and Waltine Nauta. [...]