Being all she can be: Gender integration in NATO military forces

Item

Title
Being all she can be: Gender integration in NATO military forces
Identifier
d_2009_2013:9316ccde8357:10372
identifier
10559
Creator
Obradovic, Lana,
Contributor
Irving L. Markovitz
Date
2010
Language
English
Publisher
City University of New York.
Subject
Political science | Gender studies | Womens studies | International relations | gender integration | NATO | women in the military
Abstract
For centuries national military forces excluded women from their ranks. However, in the last four decades numerous states have passed legislation permanently integrating women into their military services and have dramatically increased their numbers and their role. By examining twenty-four NATO member states, this study will attempt to build the theoretical model that explains why states abandon their policies of exclusion and seek to integrate more women into their military services. It combines both large-N quantitative analysis and case studies of the United States, Italy, Hungary and Poland. The main argument put forth in this dissertation is that civilian policymakers and military leadership no longer surrender to parochial gendered division of the roles, but rather integrate women to meet the recruitment numbers due to military modernization, professionalization and levels of threat to national security; to meet the demands of domestic women's movements and to meet state's responsibilities under international agreements regarding gender equity and gender mainstreaming in the military.
Type
dissertation
Source
2009_2013.csv
degree
Ph.D.
Program
Political Science