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Academic Journals
- 1,284
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedThe problems women face in Romania's armed forces are not all that different from those they face in Romanian society in general. Power and decision-making positions are hard to attain. Thus, for example, in the...
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From:American Jewish History (Vol. 89, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedIn the December 1920 issue of The Menorah Journal, Nathan Isaacs launched a trenchant refutation of the image of the perilous and pernicious "International Jew" then circulating widely across America. Although this...
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From:Army LawyerThis fall, the U.S. Army Claims Service (USARCS) fielded a new computer program to process personnel claims: (1) the Personnel Claims Army Information Management System (PCLAIMS). (2) The new program permits Army claims...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedThe number of professional and contractual female soldiers in the Hungarian Armed Forces increased annually during the 1990s. The growth in the number of female soldiers in ensign and junior officer positions was...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedPolitico-Historical Background During the last decades many countries offered women the possibility of joining the Armed Forces. In Austria the first high-level political discussion of women joining the military took...
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From:Armed Forces & Society: An Interdisciplinary Journal (Vol. 22, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedCohesion, combat readiness and acceptance of women were examined among male and female junior enlisted soldiers and male noncommissioned officers (NCOs) in 19 combat service support companies. The proportion of junior...
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From:Contemporary Economic Policy (Vol. 20, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedSince the inception of the all-volunteer force (AVF) in 1973, the U.S. military has been considered a pioneer of equal opportunity among the nation's institutions, despite its being a unique internal labor market...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedAs a graduating ATC student I carried out a survey among students who had specialized in Air Traffic Control at the Institute of Aviation Officers at the Miklos Zrinyi National Defense University. The 27 respondents...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedI will try to present to you as best I can the current situation of women in the Slovenian Armed Forces from my point of view as an outside observer. In general, the Slovenian Armed Forces reflect the situation in...
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From:Training & Development (Vol. 49, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedMilitary people can effectively function in non-military settings such as corporate organizations because they have been properly trained in teamwork and leadership. The US Marine Corps is a perfect example of a military...
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From:Gender Issues (Vol. 16, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedA 1994 survey on the opinions of Army personnel on the role of women in the armed forces indicates that men and women serving in the Army have very different beliefs with regards to the competence and performances of...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedThe flow of women into the army started as a spontaneous process, supported by the military leadership. Constitutional regulations created practical opportunities for women, based on aptitude, to perform all duties in...
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From:Feminist Studies (Vol. 42, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedON MANHATTAN'S UPPER EAST SIDE in December 2010, I attended a holiday party for the Service Women's Action Network (SWAN), held in the home of former executive director Anu Bhagwati's parents. The previous October I had...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedToday, the number of women who, after conscious consideration, choose and take up military service as a career is ever growing, due to family background, the growing prestige of the profession, or perhaps a desire for a...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedIn 1998, a survey was carried out which involved all the women students (years one to four) in the two Hungarian military colleges. The aim of the research was to survey, within a motivational research context, all...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedThe history of women in the modern Czech military began during the Second World War, when some 200 women fought alongside men in battles on the Eastern and Western fronts. After the war most of these women were...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedToday, when the army is making fundamental changes in its human resources policy, it is important to consider the question of female personnel more thoroughly. The situation of women soldiers requires detailed...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedA military force in which mutual respect, trust, and loyalty are lacking is not an effective force, it is a hollow shell, nothing more than a gang of individuals, lacking cohesion and common purpose, each acting alone...
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From:Minerva: Quarterly Report on Women and the MilitaryPeer-ReviewedAs I was collecting material for my new book about the relationship between women and World War II, I interviewed women who experienced the siege of Budapest in the winter of 1944-45.(1) I discovered that what women...
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From:Army Lawyer (Issue 2)Sometimes, I feel like the poster child for the American dream. I have known what it is to live in want and in plenty. I have lived in a small structure in a rural village, walking miles every day to and from school. I...