Canadian Army Journal

Canadian Army Journal
DisciplineMilitary
LanguageEnglish and French
Publication details
History1947–present
Publisher
FrequencyQuarterly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Can. Army J.
Indexing
ISSN1713-773X
OCLC no.57191734
Links

The Canadian Army Journal (French: Le Journal de l’Armée du Canada)[1] abbreviated as CAJ (French: JAC), is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Canadian Army in English and French. It was established in 1947.

History

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The journal first adopted its current name in 1947 with Jack G. DeProse as the founding editor-in-chief.[2] Preceded by the Canadian Army Training Memorandum (an English-only publication published monthly from 1941 to 1947), the bilingual army journal ceased publication in June 1965 amidst reform within the Department of National Defence seeking to unify the periodical publications of the Canadian Armed Forces. In 1965 the Canadian Army Journal, the Navy's The Crowsnest and the Air Force's The Roundel were merged to form the Canadian Forces Sentinel, which changed its name to simply Sentinel in 1973 and then ceased publication in 1994.

The current Canadian Army Journal was preceded from 1980 to 1993 by the "roughly biannual" Canadian Army Doctrine Bulletin.[2] The army's own quarterly bilingual journal was officially relaunched as the Army Doctrine and Training Bulletin in August 1998 and then returned to its historic name in 2004.

Past Editors

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Years Active Editor
1947-1965 Mr. J.G. 'Jack' DeProse
1966-1998 CAJ Inactive
1998-20031 Captain John R. Grodzinski, CD
2003-2004 Major Shane B. Schreiber, CD
2004-2005 Major Ted H. Dillenberg, CD
2005-2015 Major Andrew B. Godefroy, CD
2015-2018 Major Chris Young, CD
2018-2019 LCol Ron Bell, CD
2019-2020 Major John Bosso, CD
2020–2022 LCol Michael A. Rostek, CD, PhD, APF
2022-present Dr. Aditi Malhotra

1 Published under the title "Army Doctrine and Training Bulletin" until 2004

References

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  1. ^ "Archives". Canadian Army Journal. Department of National Defence, Canada. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
  2. ^ a b Godefroy, Andrew B. (2007). "The Canadian Army Journal 1947-2007". The Canadian Army Journal. 10 (3): 10–12.
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