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Military, War, and Peace

University of Miami Law School

Journal

Traumatic brain injury

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Best Emerging Holistic Advocacy Practices To Break The Cyclical Trauma, Depression, Alienation And Criminalization Afflicting Our Returning War Heroes, Paul Freese, Natalie Klasky Jul 2015

Best Emerging Holistic Advocacy Practices To Break The Cyclical Trauma, Depression, Alienation And Criminalization Afflicting Our Returning War Heroes, Paul Freese, Natalie Klasky

University of Miami National Security & Armed Conflict Law Review

No abstract provided.


The National Security Implications And Potential Solutions For The Unintended Consequences Of The 1980 Bayh-­‐Dole Act On Brain-­‐Injured Veterans From The Wars In Iraq And Afghanistan, Colonel Noel Christian Pace Apr 2014

The National Security Implications And Potential Solutions For The Unintended Consequences Of The 1980 Bayh-­‐Dole Act On Brain-­‐Injured Veterans From The Wars In Iraq And Afghanistan, Colonel Noel Christian Pace

University of Miami National Security & Armed Conflict Law Review

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the “signature wound” seen in veterans from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, from which the U.S. now has over 20,000 young veterans living with TBI. However, some unintended consequences of the Bayh-­‐Dole Act of 1980, a law designed to tap the “secret weapon” of federally funded research & development (R&D) to help the U.S. return to competitiveness after the recession of the late 1970’s, are now preventing these heroes from getting the treatment and cures they need. This article reviews the history of American academia’s close cooperation with the U.S. government in solving military …