This plan was rejected by the Army General Staff in 1926.4 A second study — called the Hughes Plan after its architect Major Everett S. Hughes — was based on the premise that women would inevitably play a role in future conflicts and ...
Historically, the military has provided minorities equal opportunity. Brenda L. Moore and Schulyler C. Webb examine whether or not this is still perceived to be the case in today's Navy.
Discusses the role of women in every military conflict since the Vietnam War, the significant advances made by women in the Armed Forces during the 1980s, and subsequent resistance to these reforms
This book brings a much-needed crossnational analysis of how militaries have or have not improved gender balance, what has worked and what has not, and who have been the agents for change.
The debate about the role of women in war, violent conflict and the military is not only a long and ongoing one; it is also a heated and controversial one.
This is the first comparative, cross-national study of the participation of women in the armed forces of NATO countries.
Meet the women who have served their country courageously and who are standing up for fairness in the US military.
As Mcbride and Wibben (2012: 211) found in their study of FETs, there was an irony that 'their effectiveness is limited more by U.S. commanders than patriarchal Afghans', leading them to question just 'who is shielding their women from ...
A Woman's War Too: U.S. Women in the Military in World War II
The Handbook of Psychosocial Interventions for Veterans and Service Members is an essential resource for private practice mental health clinicians and primary care physicians, as well as a useful adjunct for VA and DOD psychologists and ...
This volume addresses the changing relationships between women and armed forces from antiquity to the present: eight chapters review the existing literature, an extended picture essay visually documents women’s military work, and eight ...