Recent assertions of the political question doctrine by battlefield contractor defendants in tort litigation have brought new life to the doctrine while raising new questions. The lawsuits stem from incidents in both Iraq and Afghanistan and include plaintiffs ranging from local nationals suing contract interrogators and interpreters, to contract employees suing another contractor following insurgent attacks, to U.S. service members suing contractors after vehicle and airplane crashes. The lawsuits involve tort claims, which on their face do not conjure up images of a constitutional power struggle, but in at least fifteen cases thus far contractor defendants have asserted the political question doctrine as a defense. The political question ...
Courts and commentators have often sourced the political question doctrine in Article III, a reposit...
To ensure that all contractors who commit crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan can be prosecuted effective...
Courts and commentators have often sourced the political question doctrine in Article III, a reposit...
Recent assertions of the political question doctrine by battlefield contractor defendants in tort li...
Out of a myriad of concerns in this evolving arena-ranging from criminal jurisdiction, to training, ...
The Army has used civilian contractors to provide supplies and services to its forces in the field s...
This chapter analyses the extent to which different kinds of immunities may bar legal proceedings ag...
As military functions are increasingly outsourced to corporate contractors, civil courts face adjudi...
The Department of Defense awards over $600 billion in government defense contracts to private contra...
In M. Maropakis Carpentry v. United States, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit upset ...
Sometimes acts of the federal government cause harm; sometimes acts of contractors hired by the fede...
As the \u27blended workforce\u27 - a realm in which contractors work alongside, and often are indist...
In order to provide context for the Custer Battles court\u27s opinion, Part II of this Note generall...
In Boyle v. United Technologies Corp., the United States Supreme Court held military contractors who...
During World War II, the U.S. Government sought out contractors in the name of “patriotism” to resea...
Courts and commentators have often sourced the political question doctrine in Article III, a reposit...
To ensure that all contractors who commit crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan can be prosecuted effective...
Courts and commentators have often sourced the political question doctrine in Article III, a reposit...
Recent assertions of the political question doctrine by battlefield contractor defendants in tort li...
Out of a myriad of concerns in this evolving arena-ranging from criminal jurisdiction, to training, ...
The Army has used civilian contractors to provide supplies and services to its forces in the field s...
This chapter analyses the extent to which different kinds of immunities may bar legal proceedings ag...
As military functions are increasingly outsourced to corporate contractors, civil courts face adjudi...
The Department of Defense awards over $600 billion in government defense contracts to private contra...
In M. Maropakis Carpentry v. United States, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit upset ...
Sometimes acts of the federal government cause harm; sometimes acts of contractors hired by the fede...
As the \u27blended workforce\u27 - a realm in which contractors work alongside, and often are indist...
In order to provide context for the Custer Battles court\u27s opinion, Part II of this Note generall...
In Boyle v. United Technologies Corp., the United States Supreme Court held military contractors who...
During World War II, the U.S. Government sought out contractors in the name of “patriotism” to resea...
Courts and commentators have often sourced the political question doctrine in Article III, a reposit...
To ensure that all contractors who commit crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan can be prosecuted effective...
Courts and commentators have often sourced the political question doctrine in Article III, a reposit...