CLPSC Published Papers
CLPSC authors have published in many excellent journals. If you are a CLPSC author and would like your paper linked here, please contact the organizing committee.
2021 Papers
Amy Gaudion, “Answering the Cyber Oversight Call”
Bryant Walker Smith & Bryce Pilz, “Protecting Individuals, Institutions, and Innovation in the U.S. Government’s Crackdown on ‘Foreign Influence’”
Daniel Woods & Rainer Böhme, “Incident Response as a Lawyers' Service”
David Wishnick & Christopher Yoo, “The Role of Transaction Cost Engineering in Standards Adoption: Evidence from Internet Security”
Derek Bambauer, “Cybersecurity for Idiots”
Elena Chachko, “National Security by Platform”
Iryna Bogdanova & Maria Vásquez Callo-Müller, “Unilateral Cyber Sanctions: Between Questioned Legality and Normative Value”
Jantje Silomon, Mischa Hansel & Fabiola Schwarz, “Bug Bounties: Between New Regulations and Geopolitical Dynamics”
Jeffrey Vagle, “Revisiting Reasonable Cybersecurity”
Mark Grzegorzewski, Margaret Smith & Barnett Koven, “Civil Cyber Defense – A New Model for Cyber Civic Engagement”
Mark Visger, “Seeing and Connecting the Dots: Legal Challenges to Countering Foreign"
Ngoc Son Bui & Jyh-An Lee, “Comparative Cybersecurity Law in Socialist Asia”
Peter Swire & DeBrae Kennedy-Mayo, “The Risks to Cybersecurity from Data Localization—Organizational Effects”
Rebecca Wexler, “Privacy as Privilege: The Stored Communications Act and Internet Evidence”
Chon Abraham, France Bélanger & Sally Daultrey, “Promoting research on cyber threat intelligence sharing in ecosystems”
Scott Shackelford, Anne Boustead & Christos Makridis, “Defining 'Reasonable' Cybersecurity: Lessons from the States”
2022 Papers
Brad N. Greenwood, Paul M. Vaaler, “Do US State Breach Notification Laws Decrease Firm Data Breaches?”
Riana Pfefferkorn, “Shooting the Messenger: Remediation of Disclosed Vulnerabilities as CFAA “Loss”
Jeffrey Vagle, "Strengthening Our Intuitions About Hacking"
Meicen Sun, “Damocles’s Switchboard: Information Externalities and the Autocratic Logic of Internet Control”
Iain Nash, “Smart Device Manufacturer Liability and Redress for Third-Party Cyberattack Victims”
Hannah T. Neprash, Claire C. McGlave, Dori A. Cross, Beth A. Virnig, Michael A. Puskarich, Jared D. Huling, Alan Z. Rozenshtein, Sayeh Nikpay, “Trends in Ransomware Attacks on US Hospitals”
Chinmayi Sharma, “Tragedy of the Digital Commons”
Janine Hiller, Kathryn Kisska-Schulze, & Scott Shackelford, “Cybersecurity carrots and sticks”
Daniel Schwarcz, Daniel Woods, Josephine Wolff, “How Privilege Undermines Cybersecurity”
Aniket Kesari, “Do Data Breach Notification Laws Work?”
Liliya Khasanova, “Conceptual Discrepancies in Western and Russian Approaches to the International Rule of Law in Cyber [Information] Space.”
2023 Papers
Josephine Wolff & Daniel Woods, “A history of cyber risk transfer”
Charles Harry, Ido Sivan-Sevilla, Mark McDermott, “Measuring the size and severity of the integrated cyber attack surface across US county governments”
Sasha Romanosky & Peter Schirmer, “Mapping the Cyberstalking Landscape: An Empirical Analysis of Federal U.S. Crimes”
Eytan Tepper, Scott Shackelford, James B. Romano & Sergei Dmitriachev, “The Sixth Warfighting Domain?: Governing the Space-Cyber Nexus”
Sarah Scheffler & Jonathan Mayer, “SoK: Content Moderation for End-to-End Encryption”
Liliya Khasanova & Katharine Tai, “An Authoritarian Approach to Digital Sovereignty? Russian and Chinese Data Localisation Models”
Avital Baral, Taylor Reynolds, Lawrence Susskind, Daniel J. Weitzner, Angelina Wu, “Municipal cyber risk modeling using cryptographic computing to inform cyber policymaking”
Peter Swire, DeBrae Kennedy-Mayo, Drew Bagley, Sven Krasser, Avani Modak, and Christoph Brauswein, “Risks to Cybersecurity from Data Localization, Organized by Techniques, Tactics, and Procedures”’
2025 Papers
Josephine Wolff & Daniel Drezner, “Cryptocurrency Sanctions: Compliance, Enforcement & Impacts”
Benjamin Sundholm, “Navigating the Frontiers of Medtech”
Temima Hrle, Yangheran Piao, Daniel Woods, “Anticipating Personal Cyber Insurance Disputes: A US/UK User Study”
Scott Shackelford, Janine Hiller, Christos Makridis, Iain Nash, Kathryn Kisska-Schulze, “Moving Slow and Fixing Things”
Sasha Romanosky, Lloyd Dixon, Henry Willis & RJ Briggs, “Insuring Catastrophic Cyber Risk”