Many Columbia students publish work in this area, with strong support from the Program's faculty. Recent examples include:
- Square Pegs and Round Holes: Moving Beyond Bivens in National Security Cases by Alexander Steven Zbrozek
- International Dealmaking at the White House: Toward a Viable Test of Allowable Sole Executive Agreements by Joshua Abbuhl
- Improving Nuclear Security: Voluntary Commitments or Legal Regimes? by Martin Willner
- The Brussels Attack and the Authorization of Military Force Against the Islamic State by Alexandra Settelmayer
- The Rise of Homegrown Terrorism and Material Support Statutes by Arielle Klepach
- Lawfare blog posts by Doron Hindin
- A Tale of Two Kadis: Kadi II, Kadi v. Geithner & U.S. Counterterrorism Finance Efforts, by Douglas Cantwell (Click here for pdf.)
- Using Force on Land to Suppress Piracy at Sea: The Legal Landscape of a Largely Untapped Strategy, by Steven R. Obert
- Going Dark in Israel: How Does Israel Regulate Encryption?, co-authored by Professor Matthew Waxman and Doron Hindin
- Lawfare blog posts by Matt Danzer
- Lawfare blog posts by Alex Ely
- Hackback: Permitting Retaliatory Hacking by Non-State Actors as Proportionate Countermeasures to Transboundary Cyberharm, by Jan Messerschmidt
- Preventive Detention in American Theory and Practice, by Adam Klein (with B. Wittes)
- The End of al Qaeda? Rethinking the Legal End of the War on Terror, by Adam Klein
- Changing Tides: An Adaptable Prosecution Approach to Piracy’s Shifting Problem, by Jessica Piquet
- Streaming the International Silver Platter Doctrine: Coordinating Transnational Law Enforcement in the Age of Global Terrorism and Technology, by Caitlin Street
- "So Vast an Area of Legal Irresponsibility"? The Superior Orders Defense and Good Faith Reliance on Advice of Counsel, by Mark Hobel
- CIPA Creep: The Classified Information Procedures Act and Its Drift into Civil National Security Litigation, by Ian MacDougall