Town Hall

Trump v. United States and the National Security Constitution

July 01, 2024

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International and national security law experts Harold Hongju Koh  of Yale Law School, Deborah Pearlstein  of Princeton University, and  Matthew Waxman  of Columbia Law School join for a conversation to explore Trump v, United States  and the updated edition of Koh’s landmark book, The National Security Constitution in the Twenty-First Century. Jeffrey Rosen, president and CEO of the National Constitution Center, moderates.

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Participants:

Deborah Pearlstein is the Charles and Marie Robertson Visiting Professor in Law and Public Affairs and director of the program in law and public policy at Princeton University. She has written extensively on national security and the separation of powers and has testified before Congress on numerous accounts on topics ranging from military commissions to presidential power. She also served as the founding director of the law and security program at Human Rights First and was appointed to a 2021 State Department Advisory Committee focused on declassifying government records surrounding major events in U.S. foreign policy.

Matthew Waxman is the Liviu Librescu Professor of Law at Columbia Law School, where he directs the National Security Law program, and an adjunct senior fellow for law and foreign policy at the Council of Foreign Relations. He previously served as principal deputy director of policy planning at the State Department. His prior government appointments included deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs, director for contingency planning and international justice at the National Security Council, and executive assistant to the national security adviser.

Harold Hongju Koh is the Sterling Professor of International Law and former dean at Yale Law School. He is a leading expert in public and private international law, national security law, and human rights, the author of nine books, and has received 18 honorary degrees. His landmark 1990 book, The National Security Constitution: Sharing Power After the Iran-Contra Affair, traced the evolution of the constitutional struggle and balance of institutional powers in American foreign affairs and national security policy across America’s history. In this updated edition, The National Security Constitution in the Twenty-First Century, Koh brings the story to the present, placing recent events into constitutional perspective.

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