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In alignment with Department of Defense (DoD) Instruction 5400.17 and recent Executive Orders issued by the President, the U.S. Army has reviewed and adjusted its digital content to ensure compliance with DoD policies and priorities.

As a result, certain articles and images have been removed or are in a process of being removed or modified to maintain consistency with federal guidance and uphold the integrity of our official communication channels. Content will be archived in accordance with DA PAM 25–403.

The U.S. Army remains committed to transparency, professionalism, and adherence to DoD directives while continuing to engage with our community in a manner that reflects our core values.

MISSION


The Military Law Review serves as the premier academic journal for military legal scholarship, publishing articles that advance the practice of military law and contribute to its discourse by proposing changes to law, policy, and practice.

ARTICLES

Complete Issue PDF

Article

Conditions and Circumstances Not Constituting a Physical Disability: A New Chapter

Major Andrew E. Nist

Volume 231 Issue No. 3 - 2025

Article

The Dams That Damn Us: How the Water Wars Begin

Major Kyle F. Hoffmann

Volume 231 Issue No. 3 - 2025

Article

The Procedural Due Process Concerns of the Army Family Advocacy Program Case Review Committee

Erhan Bedestani

Volume 231 Issue No. 3 - 2025

Lecture

The Fourth Thomas J. Romig Lecture on Principled Legal Practice

Calvin M. Lederer

Volume 231 Issue No. 3 - 2025

Complete Issue PDF

Article

Can Grandpa Really Be Court-Martialed? The Constitutionality of Imposing Military Law Upon Retired Personnel

Major Marc J. Emond

Volume 231 Issue No. 2 - 2024

Article

A Higher Calling: U.S. Military Cannabis Policy After Legalization

Major Nicholas D. Turner

Volume 231 Issue No. 2 - 2024

Article

The Self-Autonomous Accused: Is the Court-Martial System Ready for the Effects of McCoy v. Louisiana?

Major Dustin L. Morgan

Volume 231 Issue No. 2 - 2024

Note

The Impact Of Panel Size On The Reliability Of Criminal Verdicts In A Military Justice Context

Isaac Kennen, Christopher Stein, Michelle Drouin, Kenneth Bordens, & Dan Coroian

Volume 231 Issue No. 2 - 2024

Lecture

The Fiftieth Kenneth J. Hodson Lecture on Criminal Law

Colonel (Retired) Lawrence J. Morris

Volume 231 Issue No. 2 - 2024

Article

Rules of Engaging in Foreign Disaster Relief: A Proposal

Major Leslie M. Schmidt

Volume 230 Issue No. 4 - 2022

Article

Exploitation

Lieutenant Colonel Gregg Curley

Volume 230 Issue No. 4 - 2022

Article

Giving the Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification Teeth: Ensuring Compliance in Contractor Self-Certifications

Major Thomas J. Hoesman

Volume 230 Issue No. 4 - 2022

Article

Regulatory Reclassification of PFAS Could Be a BRAC-Breaker

Major Keaton Norquist

Volume 230 Issue No. 3 - 2022

Lecture

Third Thomas J. Romig Lecture in Principled Legal Practice

Brigadier General (Retired) John S. Cooke

Volume 230 Issue No. 3 - 2022

Complete Issue PDF

Article

Foreword

Fred L. Borch III

Volume 229 Issue No. 2 - 2021

Article

Opening Remarks for the Seventy-fifth Anniversary of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg

Colonel Sean T. McGarry

Volume 229 Issue No. 2 - 2021

Article

The Nuremberg Military Tribunals: A Short History

Fred L. Borch III

Volume 229 Issue No. 2 - 2021

Article

German Justice on Trial: The Justice Case

William F. Meinecke Jr.

Volume 229 Issue No. 2 - 2021

Article

Individual Criminal Responsibility for War Crimes

Geoffrey S. Corn

Volume 229 Issue No. 2 - 2021

Article

“Smoothing Out” the IMT Judgment: The Legal Legacy of the Twelve Subsequent Military Tribunals

Gary D. Solis

Volume 229 Issue No. 2 - 2021

Article

Guidelines on Investigating Violations of International Humanitarian Law and Practical Mechanisms for Accountability—Today and Beyond

Andrea Joy Harrison

Volume 229 Issue No. 2 - 2021

Article

Nuremburg and the Role(s) of Accountability in the Law of Armed Conflict

Thomas B. Nachbar

Volume 229 Issue No. 2 - 2021

Article

The Significance of the Nuremberg International Military Tribunals on the Practice of Military Law

Lieutenant General Charles N. Pede

Volume 229 Issue No. 2 - 2021

Article

Virtue Lies In Moderation: The Department of Defense's Overboard DNA Criminal Indexing System

Captain Ryan M. Farrell & Lieutenant Colonel Christopher J. Goewert

Volume 228 Issue No. 4 - 2020

Article

Command Prosecutorial Authority And The Uniform Code Of Military Justice—A Redoubt Against Impunity And A National Security Imperative

Lieutenant Colonel James T. Hill

Volume 228 Issue No. 4 - 2020

Complete Issue PDF

Article

Building A Home Away From Home: Establishing Operational Control in a Foreign Country

Major Clayton J. Cox

Volume 228 Issue No. 1 - 2020

Article

Funding Surrogate Forces in the Fight Against Terrorism

Major Daniel W. Hancock, III

Volume 228 Issue No. 1 - 2020

Article

Confessions of a Convicted Sex Offender in Treatment: Should They Be Admissible at a Rehearing?

Major Colby P. Horowitz

Volume 228 Issue No. 1 - 2020

Article

Laws and Lawyers: Lethal Autonomus Weapons Bring LOAC Issues to the Design Table, and Judge Advocates Need to Be There

Major Annemarie Vazquez

Volume 228 Issue No. 1 - 2020

Complete Issue PDF

Article

Automatism: A Complete Yet Imperfect Defense

Captain Brendan J. McKenna

Volume 227 Issue No. 1 - 2019

Article

"So You're Telling Me There's a Chance"1: Why Congress Should Seize the Opportunity to Reform Article 37 (UCI) of the UCMJ

Colonel John Loran Kiel, Jr.

Volume 227 Issue No. 1 - 2019

Article

Challenging Children: A Primer on Cross-Examining Child Witnesses

Major Katherine L. DePaul

Volume 227 Issue No. 1 - 2019

Article

Money Talks and We Know What Walks: A Primer on Successfully Prosecuting Entitlement Fraud Cases

Major Mitchell D. Herniak

Volume 227 Issue No. 1 - 2019

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS


Since its inception in 1958 at The Judge Advocate General’s School, U.S. Army, in Charlottesville, Virginia, MLR has served as an academic journal that encourages a full and frank discussion of legislative, administrative, and judicial principles through a scholarly examination of the law and emerging legal precepts. In support of that mission, MLR publishes scholarly articles that are relevant to, and materially advance, the practice of law within the military.

The Military Law Review does not promulgate official policy. An article’s content is the sole responsibility of that article’s author, and the opinions and conclusions that are reflected in an article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. Government, the Department of Defense, the Department of the Army, The Judge Advocate General’s Corps, The Judge Advocate General’s Legal Center and School, or any other governmental or non-governmental agency.

The Military Law Review accepts manuscript submissions from military and civilian authors. Both a relevant subject matter expert and the MLR board of editors review any work submitted for publication. In determining whether to publish a work, the board considers the work in light of MLR’s mission and evaluates the work’s argument, research, and style.

  1. No minimum or maximum length requirements exist, though generally, the MLR publishes pieces that are thirty pages or more when double spaced with 1-inch margins and 12-point font.
  2. Footnotes should be numbered consecutively from the beginning to the end of the manuscript rather than by section.
  3. Citation standards require a citation for every factual assertion throughout the piece.
  4. Citations must conform to The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (21st ed. 2020) and the Military Citation Guide (25th ed. 2022).
  5. Submissions should provide biographical data for each author, including branch of service, duty title, present and prior positions or duty assignments, all degrees (with names of granting schools and years received), and previous publications.
  6. If submitting a lecture or paper prepared in partial fulfillment of degree requirements, the author should include the date and place of delivery of the lecture or the date and source of the degree.

Submissions must be in Microsoft Word format and should be sent via email to the Editor, Military Law Review, at usarmy.charlottesville.hqda-tjaglcs.mbx.military-law-review@army.mil.

Currently, MLR is not available in print form. It is published digitally and available online at https://tjaglcs.army.mil/Periodicals/Military-Law-Review.

Cite MLR articles with the following format, which follows The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation:

Author Name(s), Article Title, [Volume Number] MIL. L. REV. [page number] (year).

Unless noted in an article’s title, all articles are works of the U.S. Government in which no copyright subsists. When copyright is indicated in the title, please contact the Military Law Review, usarmy.charlottesville.hqda-tjaglcs.mbx.military-law-review@army.mil for copyright clearance.