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         Military Law Us:     more books (79)
  1. A POSTMODERN JANUS, PART 1.(US/NATO offensive in Serbia): An article from: Arena Magazine by Geoff Sharp, 1999-06-01
  2. US or UN?(dangers of single superpower): An article from: International Peace Update by Krishna Ahooja Patel, 2003-03-01
  3. US imposes improvements to Canadian arm export controls.: An article from: Ploughshares Monitor by Ken Epps, 2002-03-22
  4. RUSSIA - June 14 - START-2 Treaty Abandoned After US Quits ABM Treaty.(Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty)(Treaty on the Further Reduction and Limitation of ... An article from: APS Diplomat Recorder
  5. Commitments.(US nuclear disarmament)(Editorial): An article from: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists by Mike Moore, 1997-09-01
  6. The leader of the pack.(weapons industry of the US): An article from: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists by Lora Lumpe, 1999-01-01
  7. Riyadh Warns Against US Hitting Iran.(Arab League): An article from: APS Diplomat News Service by Gale Reference Team, 2007-04-02
  8. The US & Musharraf Take On The Madrassahs.(educational reform): An article from: APS Diplomat Strategic Balance in the Middle East
  9. European views of preemption in US national security strategy.: An article from: Parameters by Gary L. Guertner, 2007-06-22
  10. US RANGERS: Leading the Way (Spearhead 12) by Ian Westwell, 2003-10
  11. Evolving Military Justice
  12. Deliver Us from Evil: Peacekeepers, Warlords and a World of Endless Conflict by William Shawcross, 2000-03-23
  13. A War of a Different Kind: Military Force and America's Search for Homeland Security by Stephen M. Duncan, 2004-04
  14. Ethics for the Junior Officer: Selected Cases From Current Military Experience, 2nd Edition

61. Guardian Unlimited | Special Reports | US Military In Torture Scandal
been charged because military law has no jurisdiction over him. Hired guns from a wide array of private security firms are playing a central role in the usled
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1206725,00.html
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In this section Press review: 'The US showed humility' 12 killed in attack on Iraqi security force Press review: 'This is part of a slide toward tyranny' Mainstream parties welcome resolution ... Security council vote backs transfer of Iraq sovereignty US military in torture scandal Use of private contractors in Iraqi jail interrogations highlighted by inquiry into abuse of prisoners Julian Borger in Washington Friday April 30, 2004

62. Guardian Unlimited | Special Reports | Beyond The Law
committed abroad, and also reportedly involve some contractors who are not us citizens, the application of us law is problematic. As one military lawyer said
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1208259,00.html
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Search this site
Full coverage
Special report: Iraq
Iraq archived articles

Interactive guides on Iraq

More special reports Britain's armed forces
The anti-war movement

Al-Qaida

United States
...
Full index of our special reports
In this section Press review: 'The US showed humility' 12 killed in attack on Iraqi security force Press review: 'This is part of a slide toward tyranny' Mainstream parties welcome resolution ... Security council vote backs transfer of Iraq sovereignty Comment Beyond the law The abuse of Iraqi prisoners by US personnel shows that outsourcing military jobs has gone too far Peter Singer Monday May 3, 2004

63. Houston Criminal Defense Attorney Military Law Zimmermann And Lavine Texas Const
doctors, prominent business owners, lawyers, law enforcement officers, active duty military personnel, corporations and the site and contact us if we
http://zimmermannlavine.lawoffice.com/
Welcome
770 S. Post Oak Lane, Suite 620
Houston, Texas 77056
Phone: (713) 552-0300
Fax: (713) 552-0746
E-Mail: info@TexasDefenseLawyers.com
Zealous, Individualized Advocacy is one of Houston's most prestigious small law firms, and has developed a reputation nation-wide for the dedicated, zealous, ethical representation of our clients in cases involving criminal defense professional licensing matters, and military law Our clients have included elected officials, ordinary citizens, sports stars, bank officers, doctors, prominent business owners, lawyers, law enforcement officers, active duty military personnel, corporations and their officers, health care professionals, prosecutors, and the wives, husbands, and children of all of these types of persons. This web site contains helpful information regarding the firm and all four of its lawyers. Please review the site and contact us if we can assist you. When writing or calling the firm, please let us know which lawyer you are contacting. Such communication with the firm does not create an attorney-client relationship. Our office hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. central time, Monday through Friday. We look forward to being of service to you.

64. The Sydney Morning Herald
However, Mr Ridge, the Director of Homeland Security, has just advocated a review of us law regarding the use of the military for law enforcement duties.
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/07/27/1027497418339.html
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65. LLRX -- United States Military Commissions: A Quick Guide To Available Resources
3. Application of Yamashita, 327 us 1 (1946). An American military commission, established pursuant to the law of war, tried Japanese General Yamashita in the
http://www.llrx.com/features/military.htm
Navigation Advanced Search Law Pro Links LLRX Buzz LLRX Top 10 Meta Links Newstand Research Guide Resource Centers - Document Delivery - Comparative and Foreign Law - International Law - Intranets/Knowledge Management - Marketing - Search Engines
United States Military Commissions: A Quick Guide to Available Resources
By Stephen Young Stephen Young is a reference librarian at The Catholic University of America, Kathryn J. DuFour Law Library. Stephen has written extensively in the area of United Kingdom law, and has contributed a number of articles to LLRX.com Published March 1, 2002 [Military Order: Detention, Treatment and Trial of Certain Non-Citizens in the War Against Terrorism §1 (e). Issued by President George W. Bush (November 13, 2001)] Historical Introduction Military commissions derive their authority from the United States Constitution (Articles I and II) and the powers vested in them by statutory law ( e.g. Authorization for Use of Military Force Military Government and Martial Law ), the validity and jurisdiction of military commissions was not fully tested until the Civil War. In 1863 Union Army General Order 100 Ex Parte Vallandigham , 68 US 243 (1863), when the court drew a clear distinction between military commissions and courts-martial.

66. No Child Unrecruited
The new law, they say, undercuts the authority of some schools on the grounds that the military discriminates against The only thing that will get us to stop
http://www.motherjones.com/news/outfront/2002/11/ma_153_01.html

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High School cadets in Mariette, Georgia Should the military be given the names of every high school student in America? By David Goodman November/December 2002 Issue
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Sharon Shea-Keneally, principal of Mount Anthony Union High School in Bennington, Vermont, was shocked when she received a letter in May from military recruiters demanding a list of all her students, including names, addresses, and phone numbers. The school invites recruiters to participate in career days and job fairs, but like most school districts, it keeps student information strictly confidential. "We don't give out a list of names of our kids to anybody," says Shea-Keneally, "not to colleges, churches, employers nobody." But when Shea-Keneally insisted on an explanation, she was in for an even bigger surprise: The recruiters cited the No Child Left Behind Act, President Bush's sweeping new education law passed earlier this year. There, buried deep within the law's 670 pages, is a provision requiring public secondary schools to provide military recruiters not only with access to facilities, but also with contact information for every student or face a cutoff of all federal aid.

67. Haaretz - English
As us abstains, Security Council condemns civilian deaths in White House Israeli military actions do not serve purposes that Israel is a state of law, and we
http://www.haaretz.com/

68. Online NewsHour: Adultery In The US Air Force -- May 14, 1997
He joins us from Minot, North Dakota. fraternization; they discussed the uniform code of military justice. The Air Force Academy has a huge law department and
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/military/jan-june97/flinn_5-14.html
FALLEN STAR
MAY 14, 1997
TRANSCRIPT A love affair has led to a court martial for a promising female aviator. The career of US Air Force Lt. Kelly Flinn has been grounded by charges of adultery and other behavior unbecoming to an officer. Elizabeth Farnsworth leads a discussion on this case and whether the military's punishment for adultery fits the crime. A RealAudio version of this segment is available. NewsHour Links: April 30, 1997:
A discussion of mixed-gender training in the military. April 29, 1997:
Staff Sgt. Simpson is convicted of raping trainees while at the Army's Arberdeen Proving Ground. March 6, 1997:
Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) discusses the state of the military investigation into the sexual misconduct. February 4, 1997:
Senators Chuck Robb (D-VA) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME) discuss whether the military is doing what it can to protect the women who protect our country. April 4, 1996:
A NewsHour discussion of Women in the Military.
Browse the Online NewsHour's military coverage.

69. Fossick Law And Military Search Tools
PoliceWorld.net, law enforcement community on the web. us Army Homepage military Service, Department of Defense, special forces, war, history, picture, policy
http://fossick.com/Law.htm
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70. Glbtq >> Social Sciences >> Military Law: United States
War. Sodomy was not formally criminalized in us military law until the Articles of War went into effect in 1917. Sponsor Message.
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Alpha Index: A-B C-F G-K L-Q ... T-Z Subjects: A-E F-L M-Z
Military Law: United States
page: The United States military is governed by a set of laws, distinct from civilian law, that is known as the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ). Adopted in 1950, these laws revised the Articles of War that the United States military had officially approved during World War I. The U. S. military inherited the Articles of War directly from the British Articles of War, which had guided the U. S. military since the Revolutionary War. Sodomy was not formally criminalized in U. S. military law until the Articles of War went into effect in 1917. Sponsor Message.
Similar to the Articles of War, the UCMJ created a standard body of law that governs all service members in the United States military. Not only did the UCMJ standardize military codes of conduct and stipulate criminal acts and behavior, but it also consolidated the disparate policies and practices regarding the treatment of homosexuals and homosexual activity in the 1940s. Attempting to Achieve Consistency Prior to World War II, the U. S. military often applied the prohibitions against homosexual activity inconsistently. Even though the Articles of War prohibited sodomy, very few men were court-martialed for committing it; rather the military more often discharged men accused of sodomy through administrative proceedings, forced them to resign their commissions, or allowed them to continue serving if a conviction was unlikely.

71. Allexperts Military Law Q&A
Link to us! Disclaimer. Ask any question! Allexperts.com is the oldest largest free Q A service on the Internet. Category military law, Sort By None.
http://www.allexperts.com/getExpert.asp?Category=927

72. US Military's Bad-guy Dragnet - A Terrible Way To Win A War | Csmonitor.com
war. Success hinges on restoring the us military s moral stature now. quickly. military law can take care of anything that turns up amiss.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0505/p09s02-coop.html
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Marilyn Gardner Economic Scene A Global Accounting ... Ruth Walker Commentary Stories: for 06/10/2004 Wooing Muslim Troops for Iraq Responsible Ads on Drinking China hums with change Stop the spread of America's red-vs.-blue political stain ... What is this? Most-viewed stories: (for 06/09/04) Antidote to 'Iraq is Vietnam' What UN resolution on Iraq will accomplish For Bush, a good week Democrats strike back on faith issue ... Opinion from the May 05, 2004 edition US military's bad-guy dragnet - a terrible way to win a war By Larry Seaquist GIG HARBOR, WASH. Prompted by leaked photos, US military leaders confess they learned several months ago of atrocities perpetrated by American soldiers guarding Iraqis held at Abu Ghraib prison, west of Baghdad. The generals now say they are outraged and will punish the guilty few. Outrage is not enough. Nor will reprimands set things right. Related stories: To Arabs, photos confirm brutal US

73. FedLaw - Military And War
of Army). Air Force Fact Sheet on military justice (Air Force). Jane s Defence Glossary (Jane s). Naval Justice School. Naval Reserve law Program. us Air Force, DOD.
http://www.thecre.com/fedlaw/legal22.htm
Military and War
Laws
10 USC - Armed Forces (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
32 USC - National Guard (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
36 USC - Patriotic Societies and Observations (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
37 USC - Pay and Allowances of the Uniformed Services (Cornell Legal Information Institute) ...
Warrant Officer Management Act
10 USC 571 (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
Uniformed Services Former Spouses' Protection Act
10 USC 1072 (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
Uniformed Services Health Professions Revitalization Act of 1972
10 USC 2112 (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
Defense Economic Adjustment, Diversification, Conversion, and Stabilization Act of 1990
10 USC 2391 (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
Defense Base Closure and Realignment Act of 1990
10 USC 2687 (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
Base Closure and Realignment Act, summary
10 USC 2102 Stat. 2627, P.L. 100-526, Title II (Fish and Wildlife Service)
Sikes Act, fishing on military land
16 USC 670a-670o, 74 Stat. 1052, P.L. 86-797 (Fish and Wildlife Service)
Defense Dependents' Education Act of 1978
20 USC 921 (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
Pitman-Bloom Act, war between foreign states

74. Military Training 101: Human Rights And Humanitarian Law
ICITAP) partnership with John Jay College could serve as models for some 275 us institutions providing training to foreign military and law enforcement officers
http://www.amnestyusa.org/arms_trade/ustraining/military_101.html
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MILITARY TRAINING 101: Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
The United States government trains approximately 100,000 foreign police and soldiers from more than 150 countries each year in approximately 275 military schools and installations offering over 4,100 courses. One of the purported benefits of this training is that it instills respect for human rights and democratic institutions in foreign security personnel. Yet, the vast majority of US training courses and programs do not include specific instruction on human rights or humanitarian law obligations that soldiers must obey. It is vital that the US military mainstream human rights and humanitarian law into all foreign military and police training. Such instruction should be mandatory for all US and foreign trainees attending courses, and it should be reinforced through operational exercises.
The US government must improve oversight, transparency, and accountability of US training of foreign forces.
Based on the findings of Unmatched Power, Unmet Principles: The Human Rights Dimensions of US Training of Foreign Military and Police Forces, Amnesty International USA recommends that the US government:

75. Black Hawk Helicopters Over Las Vegas, Snipers In Times Square 2004 Begins With
2004 begins with massive military mobilization in us cities. The new year began in the us under conditions of of police, army and federal law enforcement agents
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/jan2004/2004-j03_prn.shtml
World Socialist Web Site www.wsws.org
WSWS North America
Black Hawk helicopters over Las Vegas, snipers in Times Square
2004 begins with massive military mobilization in US cities
By David Walsh
3 January 2004 Back to screen version Send this link by email Email the author Snipers manned the rooftops over Times Square, while New York streets and its harbor were flooded with thousands of police, including many plainclothes officers. Bomb-sniffing dogs were on duty in New York and counter-terror units carried equipment to detect chemical, biological or radiological contamination. These measures, aimed at terrorizing and intimidating the population, must be taken as a serious warning of the aims of the Bush administration in 2004 and beyond. US intelligence may possibly have wind of further terrorist attacks on air traffic. The measures taken are so financially damaging to the airlines that the existence of serious threats can by no means be ruled out. At the same time, the refusal of the US government to give the public any information about the alleged threats tends, if anything, to undermine the credibility of its claims, while militating against effective measures to protect the flying public and the population as a whole. These policies, far from protecting the people of the US and the world from terrorist crimes, have heightened the chances that thousands more innocent people will die in such attacks. They may very well have dangerously compromised the air traffic safety system. The feverish actions of the past several days suggest that the Bush administration is sitting atop a crisis of its own making, with which it does not know how to cope.

76. US Prepares For Military Tribunals At Guantanamo Bay
of international law, the estimated 680 prisoners have been held without charges and without legal representation since they began arriving at the us military
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/jun2003/trib-j04.shtml
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US prepares for military tribunals at Guantanamo Bay
By Kate Randall 4 June 2003 Use this version to print Send this link by email Email the author The United States is making plans to try prisoners held at the US Naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba by military tribunal. All of the potential charges carry a possible death sentence. In violation of international law, the estimated 680 prisoners have been held without charges and without legal representation since they began arriving at the US military camp 18 months ago. Previously incarcerated at Camp X-Ray, they are now being held at the newly constructed Camp Delta. US government plans for the military tribunals were revealed by Major-General Geoffrey Miller, who is in charge of the prisoners, and reported May 25 in the British Mail on Sunday . Prisoners would be tried and sentenced without leaving Guantanamo Bay. According to the Mail on Sunday article, the plans include building a permanent jail at Camp Delta, with a possible death row and execution chamber. The trials would take place without juries and without appeal to a higher court. President George W. Bush and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld would have final say on sentencing of suspects, up to and including the death penalty.

77. Army JAG Corps People Major Robert Vasquez, LL.M. Candidate
and yet I deployed to Thailand to take charge of a key legal component of a joint us/Thai military exercise. I don t think many of my law school colleagues can
http://law.goarmy.com/people/vasquez.htm
In law school, Major Vasquez took part in the JAG Corps Summer Internship Program. As an intern, he says, "I got to see the JAG Corps firsthand, and I realized the people really make the JAG Corps special. I felt like they wanted me to succeed. Who could ask for a better set of mentors?"
Major Vasquez worked for a year at a civilian law firm. "My exposure to different areas of law was limited," he says, "and I realized my chances of doing anything significant was minimal. I spent almost all of my time writing motions and interviewing witnesses over the phone, but never really leaving my desk." In the JAG Corps, however, he has seen much more than his desk. "I was a Judge Advocate of less than four years, and yet I deployed to Thailand to take charge of a key legal component of a joint U.S./Thai military exercise. I don't think many of my law school colleagues can say they assumed that much responsibility that quickly."
In the JAG Corps, Major Vasquez has enjoyed practicing a wide range of law. From criminal and consumer law to family law and Federal Tort Claims litigation, he is always learning something new. "Best of all," he says, "I did all of that in the first five years of my career."
Major Vasquez is considering a long-term career with the Army JAG Corps for several reasons, "First and foremost the people. They're just fantastic people. And second, the adventure—the ability to travel around and experience different things." Finally, he says, "I really believe in the Army's mission and the people who carry out that mission. In the end, you feel like you make a difference."

78. Human Rights First | US Law & Security - Civil Liberties After 9/11
that the strippeddown trials would fall short of minimum due process protections required by us and international law. A second “military commission order
http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/us_law/us_law_09.htm
PROGRAMS ABOUT US CONTRIBUTE MEDIA ROOM SEARCH: Listen to 6/25 Press Briefing
Human Rights First has written a series of reports on the erosion of civil liberties in the U.S. since 9/11. The three reports, and the dates they cover, are:
Assessing the New Normal

3/03 to 9/03

Imbalance of Powers

9/02 to 3/03
...
Op-Ed: Rumsfeld's Actions Speak Louder (05/15/04)

By Kerry Kennedy and Michael Posner in The Boston Globe
Letter to Rumsfeld: Disclose Location of Detainees (05/13/04)
PDF 29KB
Statement of Human Rights First on Security Detainee Treatment (05/05/04)

Pearlstein Speech: Contesting Power Over Guantanamo Bay – The President and the Supreme Court (4/26/04)
9-11 Detainees and the Supreme Court: Visit Our Legal Resource Center Posner speech: National Security After September 11 A Rights Perspective (2/7/04) ... Our New Federalism Broad Based Concern About Local Law Enforcement of Federal Immigration Laws Federal Appeals Court Says President Cannot Detain U.S. Citizen as Enemy Combatant (12/18/03) Pentagon Urged to Open Military Commission Trials to NGO Observers (12/16/03) Op-Ed: Detained at the Whim of the President (12/10/03) Letter on Judicial Nomination of Pentagon General Counsel Haynes (11/18/03) ... Three Legal Briefs Challenging President's Ability to Detain U.S. Citizen Without Charge (July 2003) Appeals Court Authorizes Secret Arrests (6/17/03) Letter to Ashcroft Re. Detention Without Charge (6/4/03)

79. West-Search Results
of New Jersey regulations, agencies, regulatory programs, court treatment of points of law, and cross military Justice Reporter® Reports us Court of
http://findlaw.west.thomson.com/store/searchresults.asp?skin_site_id=Findlaw&Pro

80. Civil Liberties
The usA PATRIOT Act and the us Department of Western Reserve University School of law JURIST Forum military Commissions Some Perhaps Legal, But Most Unwise
http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/terrorism/terrorism3b.htm
JURIST: The Legal Education Network , University of Pittsburgh School of Law
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