National Security, Technology & Law Working Group

Explore Research

Filter By:

Topic

Type

Author

Enter comma-separated ID numbers for authors

Support the Hoover Institution

Join the Hoover Institution's community of supporters in advancing ideas defining a free society.

Support Hoover

Analysis and Commentary

An Interesting Question About Donald Trump

by Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Tuesday, December 8, 2015

On Twitter, NYU Law Professor Robert Howse posed a very interesting question about Donald Trump.

Analysis and Commentary

Donald Trump's Latest, And Mai El-Sadany's Latest

by Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Monday, December 7, 2015

My phone just flashed a New York Times update at me: "Donald Trump Calls for Barring Muslims from Entering the U.S."

Analysis and Commentary

Statement From Military Commission Chief Prosecutor Mark Martins

by Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Monday, December 7, 2015

Military Commissions Chief Prosecutor Mark Martins issued the following statement over the weekend in advance of this week's pre-trial hearings in the 9/11 case.

Featured

On The President’s Request For A Vote On An AUMF For ISIL

by Jack Goldsmithvia Lawfare
Monday, December 7, 2015

There were at least two points of note in President Obama’s call last night for Congress to “vote to authorize the continued use of military force against these terrorists.” First, the President did not mention his draft AUMF for ISIL, much less ask Congress to approve that draft.

Analysis and Commentary

E-Residency In Estonia, Part I: Wherein I Apply To Digitally Betray My Country

by Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Friday, December 4, 2015

This week, I had the pleasure of hosting the third Hoover Book Soiree, which featured Edward Lucas of the Economist talking about his new book, Cyberphobia: Identity, Trust, Security, and the Internet.

Analysis and Commentary

Rational Security: The "Slippery Slope" Edition

by Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Thursday, December 3, 2015

It's a fun week on Rational Security. Shane and I both try our hands at singing. Tamara wisely refrains. Meanwhile, President Obama is sending 200 more special operations forces to Iraq to combat ISIS.

Analysis and Commentary

Maybe Those Chinese Cyber Espionage Indictments Weren't So Dumb

by Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Tuesday, December 1, 2015

A few weeks ago, I took note of the comments of China-cybersecurity expert James Lewis to the effect that those much-derided US indictments of PLA hackers had actually had a big impact of Chinese cyber-spying.

Analysis and Commentary

Is Israel Going Dark?

by Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Monday, November 30, 2015

Today's fascinating piece by Matthew Waxman and Doron Hindin, "How Does Israel Regulate Encryption?," raises a number of questions in my mind, two of which I put out to readers by way of soliciting informed opinion on the subject.

Analysis and Commentary

Rational Security: The "Gobble, Gobble, Toil And Trouble" Edition

by Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Our guest this week is Lawfare's new managing editor, Susan Hennessey, in her first podcast appearance after leaving a spooky federal agency. We discuss Turkey's shoot-down of a Russian jet that allegedly violated Turkish airspace.

Analysis and Commentary

The Trump-Carson Blood Libel

by Benjamin Wittesvia Lawfare
Monday, November 23, 2015

What are we to make of the fact that the two leading Republican presidential candidates, frontrunner Donald Trump and Dr. Ben Carson, are both peddling what can only be described as a blood libel against Muslim Americans?

Pages

Lawfare Blog

The Next Wave of Surveillance Reform

Monday, January 25, 2016 to Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Hoover Institution, Stanford University

The National Security, Technology, and Law Working Group at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University is hosting a symposium on “The Next Wave of Surveillance Reform,” taking place on January 25 and 26, 2016, at the Hoover Institution in Stanford, CA.

- By Invitation Only -

Event
In the News

How Our Dependence On The Internet Threatens Our Security

Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Hoover Institution, Washington DC

The Hoover Institution's National Security, Technology, and Law Working Group, along with Hoover's Washington, DC office, in partnership with Lawfare host a discussion on the dangers present on the Internet and how we can do more to prevent cyber-attacks using the most successful defensive strategies.

Event

A Look at the current administration's war on terror

Tuesday, November 10, 2015
Hoover Institution, Washington DC

The Hoover Institution's National Security, Technology, and Law Working Group, along with Hoover's Washington, DC office, in partnership with Lawfare host a discussion about the Obama Administration's strategy on The War on Terror.

Event

Understanding ISIS & its Dark Future

Wednesday, October 21, 2015
Hoover Institution, Washington DC

The Hoover Institution's National Security, Technology, and Law Working Group, along with Hoover's Washington, DC office, in partnership with Lawfare host a discussion on ISIS that will discuss the long, arching threat of ISIS, its religious fervor, strategic calculation, and doomsday prophecy which have shaped the Islamic State's past and foreshadows its dark future.

Event

The 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 and Benjamin Wittes are the cochairs of the National Security, Technology, and Law Working Group.