In this article, Captain (P) Schlueter describes the development of the legal tribunal known as the court-martial. Beginning with the use of this form of trial in the armies of imperial Rome two thousand years ago, the author traces its evolution through the Middle Ages, to Britain from the Renaissance to the American Revolution. The focus then shifts to the United States, and the focus then shifts to the present day
The basic objective of this thesis is to see whether those subject to military law had in the past, ...
Although the American military is effectively one of the most potent of international institutions, ...
There are many good reasons why the military justice system is different than the civilian system. M...
In this article, Captain (P) Schlueter describes the development of the legal tribunal known as the ...
During court-martial, the commander decides on the charge, selects of the jury, and reviews the tria...
The thesis of this Article is that most of the vices infesting the military appellate system could b...
In “Military Courts and Article III,” law professor Steve Vladeck proposes a wholesale replacement o...
This article examines the statutory and judicial developments that have apparently expanded military...
This study was undertaken to examine the operation of the United States Court of Military Appeals, a...
Our present military code has come to us without fundamental change from the British Articles of War...
In the Manual for Courts-Martial, the President of the United States has established the procedural,...
Independence of the military justice system is predicated on the premise that courts-martial are Art...
Under the decision of the Supreme Court in O\u27Callahan v. Parker, 395 U.S. 258 (1969), a court-mar...
Until several years ago, most people, lawyers and laymen alike, had little concern for the nature of...
The mobilization of over twelve million persons into the armed forces in World War II made necessary...
The basic objective of this thesis is to see whether those subject to military law had in the past, ...
Although the American military is effectively one of the most potent of international institutions, ...
There are many good reasons why the military justice system is different than the civilian system. M...
In this article, Captain (P) Schlueter describes the development of the legal tribunal known as the ...
During court-martial, the commander decides on the charge, selects of the jury, and reviews the tria...
The thesis of this Article is that most of the vices infesting the military appellate system could b...
In “Military Courts and Article III,” law professor Steve Vladeck proposes a wholesale replacement o...
This article examines the statutory and judicial developments that have apparently expanded military...
This study was undertaken to examine the operation of the United States Court of Military Appeals, a...
Our present military code has come to us without fundamental change from the British Articles of War...
In the Manual for Courts-Martial, the President of the United States has established the procedural,...
Independence of the military justice system is predicated on the premise that courts-martial are Art...
Under the decision of the Supreme Court in O\u27Callahan v. Parker, 395 U.S. 258 (1969), a court-mar...
Until several years ago, most people, lawyers and laymen alike, had little concern for the nature of...
The mobilization of over twelve million persons into the armed forces in World War II made necessary...
The basic objective of this thesis is to see whether those subject to military law had in the past, ...
Although the American military is effectively one of the most potent of international institutions, ...
There are many good reasons why the military justice system is different than the civilian system. M...