Self-Restraint and National Security
Why does the government sometimes tie its own hands in national security operations? Much of the caselaw and scholarship concerning national security rests on the assumption that the executive branch...
View ArticleEducating National Security Lawyers for the Twenty-first Century: The...
Throughout its fifty-year history, the American Bar Association (ABA) Standing Committee on Law and National Security (SCOLANS) has strived to address the most important national security law issues...
View ArticleDeveloping Client-Ready Practitioners: Learning How to Practice National...
The demand for trained and educated national security lawyers, including those in the military, is not going to lessen. The challenge is to meet the increasing demand with shrinking resources. The...
View ArticleThe Case of Colonel Abel
Early in the morning of June 21, 1957, almost exactly fifty-three years before the June 2010 arrests, Special Agents Edward Gamber and Paul Blasco of the FBI pushed their way into Room 839 at the Hotel...
View ArticleNational Security Law Pedagogy and the Role of Simulations
This article challenges the dominant pedagogical assumptions in the legal academy. It begins by briefly considering the state of the field of national security law, noting the rapid expansion in...
View Article
More Pages to Explore .....