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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Military, War, and Peace
Insurgency And Counterinsurgency: The Role Of Strategic Theory, Charles Maechling Jr.
Insurgency And Counterinsurgency: The Role Of Strategic Theory, Charles Maechling Jr.
The US Army War College Quarterly: Parameters
No abstract provided.
The Right Of States To Use Armed Force, Oscar Schachter
The Right Of States To Use Armed Force, Oscar Schachter
Michigan Law Review
When the United Nations (UN) Charter was adopted, it was generally considered to have outlawed war. States accepted the obligation to settle all disputes by peaceful means and to refrain from the use or threat of use of force in their international relations. Only two exceptions were expressly allowed: force used in self-defense when an armed attack occurs, and armed action authorized by the UN Security Council as an enforcement measure. These provisions were seen by most observers as the heart of the Charter. and the most important principles of contemporary international law. They have been reaffirmed over and over …
The Crisis In Arms Control, Harold K. Jacobson
The Crisis In Arms Control, Harold K. Jacobson
Michigan Law Review
There is general agreement among observers of contemporary international affairs, and national and international officials from all sides, that there is a serious crisis in arms control. As of January 1984, the Soviet Union had broken off two major arms control negotiations: the Intermediate- Range Nuclear Force Talks (INF) and the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks (START). Negotiations in the United Nations Conference on Disarmament (CD) on a variety of arms control issues were stalemated. The United States was engaged in a large-scale military build up, and there was no sign that the Soviet Union would abate the extensive military programs …
A Republic, If You Can Keep It, Daniel N. Hoffman
A Republic, If You Can Keep It, Daniel N. Hoffman
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Undeclared War: Twilight Zone of Constitutional Power by Edward Keynes and The War-Making Powers of the President: Constitutional and International Law Aspects by Ann Van Wynen Thomas and A.J. Thomas, Jr.
Justice At War: The Story Of The Japanese American Internment Cases, Michigan Law Review
Justice At War: The Story Of The Japanese American Internment Cases, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Justice at War: The Story of the Japanese American Internment Cases by Peter Irons
From O'Callahan To Chappell: The Burger Court And The Military, Stephen J. Kaczynski
From O'Callahan To Chappell: The Burger Court And The Military, Stephen J. Kaczynski
University of Richmond Law Review
In 1969, the United States was deeply committed to a ground war in Southeast Asia in which the suffering and death was brought home daily to the American television viewer. Distrust of the military was never higher, as the repeated assertions of the imminent collapse of the enemy had apparently been graphically belied a year earlier in the Tet Offensive. As a newly elected President pledged to bring "peace with honor" to a war which seemed amenable to neither, Justice Douglas announced the decision of the Court in O'Callahan v. Parker.
Uncle Sam Wants You: Selective Prosecution Of Draft Nonregistrants, Valerie J. Feldman
Uncle Sam Wants You: Selective Prosecution Of Draft Nonregistrants, Valerie J. Feldman
Loyola University Chicago Law Journal
No abstract provided.