by harvardnsj | Jun 8, 2022 | Main Volumes, Volume 13
Dueling over Dual_EC_DRGB: The Consequences of Corrupting a Cryptographic Standardization Process By Nadiya Kostyuk and Susan Landau In recent decades, the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), which develops cryptographic standards for...
by harvardnsj | Jun 28, 2021 | Main Volumes
The Evolution and Jurisprudence of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review by Laura K. Donohue The past eight years have witnessed an explosion in the number of publicly-available opinions and orders issued by...
by harvardnsj | Feb 17, 2021 | Harvard Law School Events, Main Volumes
Register and receive the zoom link here: https://bit.ly/37mSFE5 Monday NSJ Conference on Racial and Intersectional Critiques of National Security Panel: Gender, World Peace, Armed Conflict, and UNSCR 1325: Where Were We, Where Are We, and Where Do We Go from Here? 12...
by harvardnsj | Feb 1, 2021 | Main Volumes
Pro-Constitutional Engagement: Judicial Review, Legislative Avoidance and Institutional Interdependence in National Security by Nino Guruli This paper examines the role of legislatures and how judicial review can prompt legislative activity. In the national security...
by harvardnsj | Jun 19, 2020 | Main Volumes
Examining the Anomalies, Explaining the Value: Should the USA FREEDOM Act’s Metadata Program be Extended? by Susan Landau & Asaf Lubin Edward Snowden’s disclosure of National Security Agency (“NSA”) bulk collection of communications metadata was a highly...
by harvardnsj | Apr 7, 2020 | Main Volumes
First Amendment Sentence Mitigation: Beyond a Public Accountability Defense for Whistleblowers by Mailyn Fidler Public accountability defenses for whistleblowers who reveal national security information to the media or the public have largely failed. Courts have...