worn by Army and Air Force personnel assigned to The Judge Advocate General's Legal Center and School The Legal Center and School (LCS) is led by a
brigadier general who serves as the commander, a
colonel as the chief of staff, a
chief warrant officer who serves as the command chief warrant officer, and a
command sergeant major who serves as the senior enlisted advisor for the LCS and also as the commandant of the Noncommissioned Officer Academy. The school is led by a
colonel who serves as the dean, and the center is led by a
colonel who serves as the legal center director. The school's four academic departments are led by
lieutenant colonels. Faculty members are
lieutenant colonels or
majors who are licensed attorneys and are members of the
Army Judge Advocate General's Corps. Each academic department has at least one faculty member who is a judge advocate in the
Navy,
Marine Corps, or
Air Force. Prior to entry into the JAG School, all Army judge advocates must have graduated from an ABA-accredited law school and be admitted to practice law by the highest court of a state or federal district. While some judge advocates have prior enlisted or commissioned experience, most are direct commissioned and have no prior military training or experience. The JAG School is generally considered the most exclusive graduate
service academy within the U.S. Federal Government. Acceptance into the Army JAG Corps and subsequent JAG School is considered "highly selective" with an acceptance rate ranging between 4-7%. In 2017, the Army JAG Corps accepted 200 out of 4,000 applicants. The JAG School has a long history of supplying attorneys into the military and federal government roles, particularly the federal judiciary. The initial entry training into the JAG Corps is composed of two phases, first a 6-week Direct Commission Course (DCC) at
Fort Moore, Georgia followed by military legal training at the JAG School. ==Master of Laws (LL.M.)==