A Curated Reading List for the Martial Artist and Armed Citizen
Empty hand strikes —
the law waits beyond the gate,
judge what the fist wrought.
The trigger is pulled,
silence follows the thunder —
courts weigh every grain.
CEJames, Researcher/Author
Akira Ichinose, Editor/Research Assistant
Keikoku / CAVEAT
This document is produced for educational and research purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice. Self-defense law varies by jurisdiction, and the reader is strongly urged to consult a qualified attorney licensed in their state or territory before relying on any information contained herein. The authors and editor assume no liability for decisions made based on the content of this reading list. Laws change; confirm currency of all cited statutes and case law.
Introduction
The moment a defender employs force — whether an open-hand strike, a choke hold, a kick, or a firearm — the law enters the room. Winning the physical confrontation is only half the equation. What follows can include arrest, criminal prosecution, civil litigation, and the complete upending of one's personal and professional life. Understanding the legal framework before a defensive act is not optional; it is a core component of responsible self-defense training.
This reading list is organized into four sections:
(1) foundational legal texts that every serious practitioner should own;
(2) works specific to empty-hand and martial arts applications;
(3) works focused on firearms and use of lethal force; and
(4) supplementary titles addressing the psychology, ethics, and decision-making that intersect with legal justification.
Annotations accompany each entry to assist the reader in prioritizing selections relevant to their training level and jurisdiction.
Nevada practitioners should note that this state follows a modified Castle Doctrine with no duty to retreat in places where one has a lawful right to be. That said, reasonableness standards, proportionality requirements, and the legal definition of imminent threat apply as in most jurisdictions. Several titles below address these constructs directly.
Section I: Foundational Legal Texts
These works provide the broad legal scaffolding that governs self-defense, regardless of method. Every practitioner — armed or unarmed — should be familiar with their core arguments.
1. Branca, A. (2016). The law of self defense: The indispensable guide to the armed citizen (3rd ed.). Law of Self Defense LLC.
The definitive lay-accessible text on American self-defense law. Branca systematically covers the five pillars of lawful self-defense — innocence, imminence, proportionality, avoidance, and reasonableness — across all fifty states. Indispensable as a starting reference. Branca is an attorney and nationally recognized self-defense law educator.
2. Ayoob, M. (2014). Deadly force: Understanding your right to self defense. Gun Digest Books.
Massad Ayoob brings decades of courtroom experience as an expert witness to this comprehensive guide. While the primary focus is firearms, his treatment of the reasonable man standard, disparity of force, and articulation of self-defense reasoning is applicable to any force modality, including unarmed combat.
3. Ayoob, M. (1980). In the gravest extreme: The role of the firearm in personal protection. Police Bookshelf.
Though decades old, this slim volume remains foundational. Ayoob established the concept of the 'Ayoob Files' — real cases analyzed for legal and tactical lessons. Required reading for understanding the nexus of ethics, tactics, and legal consequence.
4. Robinson, P. (2013). Would you convict? Eighteen cases that challenged the law. New York University Press.
A law professor walks the reader through eighteen landmark self-defense and use-of-force cases. The book develops the reader's ability to think as a juror, a skill of direct utility to anyone who may one day face a grand jury or trial. Not martial-arts specific, but legally foundational.
5. Lott, J. R. (2010). More guns, less crime: Understanding crime and gun-control laws (3rd ed.). University of Chicago Press.
A data-driven examination of the relationship between lawful gun ownership and violent crime. While primarily statistical and policy-oriented, the legal discussion of concealed carry statutes and their evolution provides useful regulatory context for the armed practitioner.
Section II: Martial Arts, Empty-Hand Defense, and the Law
The legal analysis of unarmed self-defense is in many ways more complex than that of firearms cases. A trained martial artist may be held to a higher standard of care, classified as a 'deadly weapon' in their own right, or face heightened scrutiny when their training becomes a matter of record. The following works address these unique dimensions.
6. Miller, R. (2008). Meditations on violence: A comparison of martial arts training and real world violence. YMAA Publication Center.
Rory Miller — correctional officer, martial artist, and force-use specialist — examines the profound disconnect between dojo training and street reality. His chapters on the legal aftermath of violence are among the clearest available on the subject. Strongly recommended for any Isshin-ryu or classical practitioner calibrating their training to real-world application.
7. Miller, R. (2011). Facing violence: Preparing for the unexpected. YMAA Publication Center.
A companion to Meditations on Violence, this text focuses on the spectrum of violence and the legal and ethical framework surrounding each level of response. Miller's 'use of force matrix' helps practitioners understand proportionality — the linchpin of any self-defense legal defense.
8. Miller, R., & Kane, L. (2012). Scaling force: Dynamic decision making under threat of violence. YMAA Publication Center.
Jointly authored by Miller and Lawrence Kane, this work directly addresses the force continuum and how a defender's decisions at each level will be evaluated by law enforcement, prosecutors, and juries. Of particular value is the analysis of how martial arts training affects a court's perception of the practitioner's capabilities.
9. Kane, L., & Wilder, K. (2009). The little black book of violence: What every young man needs to know about fighting. YMAA Publication Center.
Despite the title, this book is a serious treatment of violence, its legal consequences, and the ethical framework of a trained fighter. The legal sections are particularly frank about the criminal and civil exposure that follows any use of force, trained or untrained.
10. MacYoung, M., & MacYoung, D. G. (2016). Campfire tales from hell: Collected wisdom on surviving violence, mayhem, and life from those who have. CreateSpace.
Marc MacYoung is among the most prolific and pragmatic writers on violence and its aftermath. This anthology covers real-world accounts from practitioners, law enforcement, and survivors — with recurring emphasis on the legal and psychological aftermath of force application. MacYoung's website (nononsenseselfdefense.com) is also a recommended resource.
11. Artwohl, A., & Christensen, L. W. (1997). Deadly force encounters: What cops know and what you should too. Paladin Press.
Although primarily written for law enforcement, this text's treatment of the psychological aftermath of force — including perceptual distortions, memory gaps, and the legal implications of what a defender can and cannot accurately report — is critical reading for any martial artist who might use significant force in self-defense.
Section III: Firearms, Lethal Force, and Legal Liability
The armed citizen operates in a legal environment that has been shaped by decades of case law, legislative evolution, and public controversy. The following titles range from highly practical carry and legal guides to in-depth analyses of specific use-of-force doctrines.
12. Branca, A. (2020). Law of self defense: State-specific legal summaries. Law of Self Defense LLC.
A companion volume to Branca's general text, this work provides state-by-state breakdowns of self-defense statutes, Stand Your Ground provisions, Castle Doctrine specifications, and duty-to-retreat requirements. Nevada practitioners will find the relevant chapter directly applicable to their legal environment.
13. Ayoob, M. (2012). Straight talk on armed defense: What the experts want you to know. Gun Digest Books.
A collection of expert perspectives — legal, medical, psychological, and tactical — on the realities of armed self-defense. Ayoob curates contributions from attorneys, trainers, and force-science researchers to provide a genuinely multi-disciplinary resource.
14. Kopel, D. B. (1992). The samurai, the mountie, and the cowboy: Should America adopt the gun controls of other democracies?. Prometheus Books.
A comparative legal and cultural study of gun regulation across multiple nations. Particularly useful for understanding the philosophical and historical underpinnings of American self-defense rights and how they diverge from other legal traditions — including Japan's, which directly informs the karate tradition.
15. Gonzalez, R. (2015). Concealed carry and home defense fundamentals. United States Concealed Carry Association.
Produced by the USCCA, this text provides the concealed carry practitioner with a structured foundation covering legal justification, duty to retreat, Castle Doctrine application, and the decision-making process under stress. Widely used in state CCW certification curricula.
16. Awerbuck, L. (2010). Surviving the killing fields: The essential guide for the law-abiding gun owner. Loose Cannon Enterprises.
Louis Awerbuck — legendary firearms instructor — examines the tactical and legal realities of defensive gun use. His no-nonsense approach to the legal aftermath of a shooting, including police interviews and the importance of attorney involvement before any statement, is particularly valuable.
17. Farnam, J. (2005). The farnam method of defensive handgunning (2nd ed.). DTI Publications.
John Farnam's training program is among the most legally conscious in the defensive firearms community. This text is peppered with discussion of the legal and ethical obligations of the armed citizen, including the concept of pre-incident indicators and their legal significance in establishing reasonableness.
Section IV: Psychology, Ethics, and Decision-Making Under Threat
Legal justification for self-defense ultimately rests on the concept of reasonableness — what a reasonable person in the same situation would have believed and done. The following works develop the psychological and ethical foundations that inform that judgment, and that a defender may need to articulate credibly in a legal proceeding.
18. de Becker, G. (1997). The gift of fear: Survival signals that protect us from violence. Little, Brown and Company.
Gavin de Becker's landmark work on pre-attack recognition is essential for establishing the reasonableness of a defensive response. A defender who can articulate specific behavioral cues they observed prior to acting stands on far stronger legal ground than one who cannot. Required reading across disciplines.
19. Grossman, D. (1995). On killing: The psychological cost of learning to kill in war and society. Little, Brown and Company.
Lt. Col. Dave Grossman's seminal work on the psychology of lethal force is essential background for understanding the psychological aftermath that a defender must navigate — and that courts frequently misunderstand. The sections on conditioned response and its legal implications are especially pertinent for highly trained martial artists and competitive shooters.
20. Klinger, D. (2004). Into the kill zone: A cop's eye view of deadly force. Jossey-Bass.
A sociologist and former police officer interviews eighty officers who have used lethal force. The resulting portrait of the psychological and perceptual experience of a lethal encounter is invaluable for understanding what a defender's credible account should and will reflect — and why post-incident statements require extreme care.
21. Siddle, B. K. (1995). Sharpening the warrior's edge: The psychology and science of training. PPCT Research Publications.
Bruce Siddle's research on the Sympathetic Nervous System's effect on gross and fine motor skills under stress has direct legal implications: a practitioner's ability to articulate what they could and could not do in the moment — and why — is strengthened by familiarity with the force science literature this volume helped establish.
22. Remsberg, C. (1986). The tactical edge: Surviving high-risk patrol. Calibre Press.
Though aimed at law enforcement, Remsberg's treatment of force decisions, pre-attack cues, and officer survival principles maps directly onto the civilian defender's legal and ethical landscape. The sections on articulable threat recognition remain among the clearest in the literature.
23. Miller, R. (2015). Conflict communications: A new paradigm in conscious communication. CreateSpace.
Miller's ConCom framework teaches the practitioner to recognize and navigate the spectrum of conflict — from social friction to asocial violence. Understanding this taxonomy matters legally because courts apply different standards to different categories of encounter. A defender who understood the distinction at the time of the incident is far better positioned to explain their decision-making.
A Note on Nevada Practitioners
Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 200 governs self-defense in this state, incorporating Castle Doctrine protections and a modified Stand Your Ground provision. Practitioners in the Carson Valley area should be aware that while there is no duty to retreat from a place where one has a lawful right to be, the requirement of reasonable belief in imminent threat remains controlling. The trained martial artist, in particular, may face heightened scrutiny regarding proportionality — a court may consider formal training as elevating the practitioner's capacity to inflict serious harm, thereby holding them to a higher standard of restraint in situations where an untrained person might be extended greater latitude.
Andrew Branca's Law of Self Defense (Item 1) and his state-specific companion volume (Item 12) are the most immediately actionable resources for Nevada-based readers.
Consultation with a Nevada criminal defense attorney who specializes in use-of-force matters is strongly recommended before any armed or potentially combative encounter occurs — and ideally before one carries a firearm or relies on martial arts training as a primary defensive strategy.
APA Bibliography
The following references are presented in APA 7th edition format with hanging indents per house style.
Artwohl, A., & Christensen, L. W. (1997). Deadly force encounters: What cops know and what you should too. Paladin Press.
Awerbuck, L. (2010). Surviving the killing fields: The essential guide for the law-abiding gun owner. Loose Cannon Enterprises.
Ayoob, M. (1980). In the gravest extreme: The role of the firearm in personal protection. Police Bookshelf.
Ayoob, M. (2012). Straight talk on armed defense: What the experts want you to know. Gun Digest Books.
Ayoob, M. (2014). Deadly force: Understanding your right to self defense. Gun Digest Books.
Branca, A. (2016). The law of self defense: The indispensable guide to the armed citizen (3rd ed.). Law of Self Defense LLC.
Branca, A. (2020). Law of self defense: State-specific legal summaries. Law of Self Defense LLC.
de Becker, G. (1997). The gift of fear: Survival signals that protect us from violence. Little, Brown and Company.
Farnam, J. (2005). The Farnam method of defensive handgunning (2nd ed.). DTI Publications.
Gonzalez, R. (2015). Concealed carry and home defense fundamentals. United States Concealed Carry Association.
Grossman, D. (1995). On killing: The psychological cost of learning to kill in war and society. Little, Brown and Company.
Kane, L., & Wilder, K. (2009). The little black book of violence: What every young man needs to know about fighting. YMAA Publication Center.
Klinger, D. (2004). Into the kill zone: A cop's eye view of deadly force. Jossey-Bass.
Kopel, D. B. (1992). The samurai, the mountie, and the cowboy: Should America adopt the gun controls of other democracies? Prometheus Books.
Lott, J. R. (2010). More guns, less crime: Understanding crime and gun-control laws (3rd ed.). University of Chicago Press.
MacYoung, M., & MacYoung, D. G. (2016). Campfire tales from hell: Collected wisdom on surviving violence, mayhem, and life from those who have. CreateSpace.
Miller, R. (2008). Meditations on violence: A comparison of martial arts training and real world violence. YMAA Publication Center.
Miller, R. (2011). Facing violence: Preparing for the unexpected. YMAA Publication Center.
Miller, R. (2015). Conflict communications: A new paradigm in conscious communication. CreateSpace.
Miller, R., & Kane, L. (2012). Scaling force: Dynamic decision making under threat of violence. YMAA Publication Center.
Remsberg, C. (1986). The tactical edge: Surviving high-risk patrol. Calibre Press.
Robinson, P. (2013). Would you convict? Eighteen cases that challenged the law. New York University Press.
Siddle, B. K. (1995). Sharpening the warrior's edge: The psychology and science of training. PPCT Research Publications.
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