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Military Justice and the Right to Counsel

SKU: 9780813188164

Original price was: $25.00.Current price is: $6.25.

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Additional information

Full Title

Military Justice and the Right to Counsel

Author(s)

S. Sidney Ulmer

Edition
ISBN

9780813188164, 9780813155081, 9780813164755

Publisher

The University Press of Kentucky

Format

PDF and EPUB

Description

In Military Justice and the Right to Counsel, S. Sidney Ulmer seeks to explore and compare the right to counsel that has been afforded the American serviceman and that which has been granted his citizen counterpart in the civil courts. The civil and constitutional rights of the serviceman and the civilian in the context of criminal prosecutions are implemented in two distinct legal settings a civil system of state and federal courts, including the United States Supreme Court, and a military system composed of courts martial, boards of review, and the United States Court of Military Appeals. Ulmer suggests that in a political system in which individual preferences are given equal weight, the values of the priorities adopted in the civil society will inevitably encroach upon the variant values of any military sub-society involving substantial numbers of people who participate in both.

Availability: In Stock

Military Justice and the Right to Counsel

SKU: 9780813164755

Original price was: $25.00.Current price is: $6.25.

Access Military Justice and the Right to Counsel Now. Discount up to 90%

Categories: ,

Additional information

Full Title

Military Justice and the Right to Counsel

Author(s)

S. Sidney Ulmer

Edition
ISBN

9780813164755, 9780813155081, 9780813188164

Publisher

The University Press of Kentucky

Format

PDF and EPUB

Description

In Military Justice and the Right to Counsel, S. Sidney Ulmer seeks to explore and compare the right to counsel that has been afforded the American serviceman and that which has been granted his citizen counterpart in the civil courts. The civil and constitutional rights of the serviceman and the civilian in the context of criminal prosecutions are implemented in two distinct legal settings a civil system of state and federal courts, including the United States Supreme Court, and a military system composed of courts martial, boards of review, and the United States Court of Military Appeals. Ulmer suggests that in a political system in which individual preferences are given equal weight, the values of the priorities adopted in the civil society will inevitably encroach upon the variant values of any military sub-society involving substantial numbers of people who participate in both.