I. Saudi Arabia, Arms Trade, and the Law of Armed Conflict
- Alex Moorehead, The Saudi Weapons Block Wouldn’t be the First: Some Past Examples of Halts on US Arms Transfers (Wednesday Sept. 21)
- Nathalie Weizmann, Are the U.S. and U.K. parties to the Saudi-led armed conflict against the Houthis in Yemen? (Thursday, Sept. 22)(Thursday, Sept. 15)
II. US-Russia Pact and the Law of Armed Conflict
- Ryan Goodman, Is the US-Russia Pact in Syria Barred by International Law? (Tuesday, Sept. 20)
- Monica Hakimi, US Responsibility Arising From Russian Violations of the Law of Armed Conflict (Wednesday, Sept. 21)
III. Surveillance
- Ashley Gorski and Patrick C. Toomey, Unprecedented and Unlawful: The NSA’s “Upstream” Surveillance (Monday, Sept. 19)
- Daniel Schuman, No More Snowdens? Start by Reforming the House Intelligence Committee (Wednesday, Sept. 21)
- Jennifer Granick and Jadzia Butler, Correcting the Record on Section 702: A Prerequisite for Meaningful Surveillance Reform, Part II (Thursday Sept. 22)
- Michael Price, A Broken Playbook: The NYPD Targeted Muslims in Over 95-Percent of Investigations That Broke Surveillance Rules (Friday, Sept. 23)
IV. Turkey and Human Rights
- Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, In Turkey, Where the More Things Change . . . (Tuesday, Sept. 20)
V. Pillaging and International Criminal Law
- James Stewart, Trump’s Calls to Pillage Iraqi Oil (Monday, Sept. 19)