Search for: "Military Order of the World Wars" Results 1 - 20 of 3,602
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11 Nov 2018, 8:00 am by Matthew Waxman
So when did World War I finally end legally? [read post]
29 May 2020, 10:09 am by Daily Record Staff
Chesapeake City-based auctioneers Alexander Historical Auctions, known internationally for its military sales, will be offering some of the most important surrender documents of World War II in its June 9 “No Surrender to Coronavirus” live auction. [read post]
25 Apr 2014, 4:02 pm by Sabrina I. Pacifici
Declarations of War and Authorizations for the Use of Military Force: Historical Background and Legal Implications. [read post]
3 Jun 2016, 5:30 am by Shane Reeves, Matthew Milikowsky
During World War II the United States military, though often hesitantly and with arbitrary results, conducted a number of such prosecutions. [read post]
3 Nov 2013, 6:04 pm by The Book Review Editor
Dirty Wars: The World is a Battlefield by Jeremy Scahill—the activist-turned journalist previously known for his exposé of the military contractor formerly known as Blackwater—is a bad book. [read post]
In the post-Cold War period, the old international economic world order flourished. [read post]
3 Jun 2018, 7:00 am by Michael Neiberg
This is why the war that began in 1914 became the First World War instead of the Third Balkan War. [read post]
6 Apr 2017, 2:30 am by Michael Kazin
These Americans, like most critics of the war elsewhere in the world, wanted to create a new global order based on cooperative relationships between nation states and their gradual disarmament. [read post]
11 Dec 2015, 12:29 am by Joanna Nicholson
Traditionally, the view has been that military personnel cannot commit war crimes against other military personnel fighting for the same side. [read post]
3 Dec 2009, 6:14 am by Barco Reference Librarian
The Army Heritage and Education Center (AHEC) has created a digitized collection of approximately 23,000 vintage Civil War photographs from the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States from the Massachusetts Commandery. [read post]
25 Feb 2022, 2:07 pm by Tom Smith
The post-Cold War order has depended on U.S. economic and military power, not on the illusion that the “international community” can enforce world order. [read post]
17 Jan 2017, 12:00 pm by Geoffrey S. Corn
These tensions do not begin with World War I; they begin at least as far back as the rise of the citizen-armies of Europe and the mobilization of the whole of society for war—something that started with the French Revolution and Napoleon, expanded under conditions of industrialized warfare in the American Civil War (though significantly and imprudently ignored as a harbinger by European militaries at the time), and then emerged full-blown in… [read post]
15 May 2015, 4:00 pm by The Book Review Editor
But does this mean that we are witnessing, as @War‘s subtitle proclaims, “the rise of the military-Internet complex”? [read post]
16 Jun 2011, 2:38 am by LindaMBeale
  We drive our middle class to poverty in order to maintain unprecedented, unneeded, and actually dangerous military might. [read post]
7 Apr 2017, 9:50 am by NCC Staff
In 2013, President Obama took the unusual step of asking Congress to approve intervention in the Syrian civil war, after he initially indicated he had the constitutional powers to order limited military strikes without its approval. [read post]
6 Oct 2014, 3:13 am
Morrow (Univ. of Michigan - Political Science) has published Order within Anarchy: The Laws of War as an International Institution (Cambridge Univ. [read post]
9 Sep 2018, 7:00 am by Bruce Jentleson
Editor’s Note: What the liberal international order is and how much it benefits the world is much-debated today, including here at Lawfare. [read post]
2 Oct 2013, 7:37 am by Anna v. Gall
ECCHR is acting in support of legal proceedings initiated on behalf of Philippine survivors of sexual violence during the Second World War. [read post]
30 Jan 2015, 8:19 pm by The Book Review Editor
  In 2011 (at the age of 88), he published On China, which chronicles the historical origins of China’s approach to foreign policy and mulls whether it and the United States are fated to a military confrontation. [read post]
2 Feb 2020, 8:00 am by Matthew Waxman
In its first major war, the War of 1812, the United States tried to take on the world’s greatest military power by relying on state militia forces for the bulk of its manpower. [read post]