Abstract
This article argues lethality should be conceptualized as a holistic and regenerative process in which adversarial militaries prepare for, adapt to, and sustain the application of force in conflict. Whereas the literature on lethality is widening to include the human war fighter, attempts to define and measure lethality have proven problematic—a struggle this article seeks to remedy. Drawing on historical, doctrinal, and interdisciplinary perspectives, the authors argue that lethality includes the capacity to kill and elements of learning and adaptation. The proposed lethality framework offers policy and military practitioners a model for assessing and operationalizing lethality in military education, leadership development, and Joint force integration.
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.55540/0031-1723.3371
Recommended Citation
John M. Hinck, Robert S. Hinck, Jayson A. Altieri & David R. Jarnot, "On Lethality: Toward a More Complete Definition and Formation of the Lethality Framework," Parameters 55, no. 4 (2025), doi:10.55540/0031-1723.3371.