Citation: Rb. O'Keeffe, Where there's smoke ... who should bear the burden when a competing contractor hires former government employees?, MILIT LAW R, 164, 2000, pp. 1-134
Citation: R. Hartzman, Congressional control of the military in a multilateral context: A constitutional analysis of Congress's power to restrict the President's authority to place United States armed forces under foreign commanders in United Nations peace operations, MILIT LAW R, 162, 1999, pp. 50-131
Citation: Ma. Myers, Deterrence and the threat of force ban: Does the UN Charter prohibit some military exercises?, MILIT LAW R, 162, 1999, pp. 132-179
Citation: Tc. Wingfield, The Chemical Weapons Convention and the military commander: Protecting very large secrets in a transparent era, MILIT LAW R, 162, 1999, pp. 180-218
Citation: Be. Vanderau, Undaunted courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the opening of the American West, MILIT LAW R, 162, 1999, pp. 227-235
Citation: Mj. Gilligan, Opening the gate?: An analysis of military law enforcement authority over civilian lawbreakers on and off the federal installation, MILIT LAW R, 161, 1999, pp. 1-55
Citation: Lm. Campanella, The regulation of "body art" in the military: Piercing the veil of servicemembers' constitutional rights, MILIT LAW R, 161, 1999, pp. 56-114
Citation: Sm. Condron, Justification for unilateral action in response to the Iraqi threat: A critical analysis of operation Desert Fox, MILIT LAW R, 161, 1999, pp. 115-180