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- 2009028247 abstract "The military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have been the United States' longest military engagements since the Vietnam War and the most severe test of the all-volunteer force, with the possible exception of the Gulf War in 1991. More than 1.5 million service members were deployed between 2002 and 2007, many of them more than once, and the fast pace of deployment has been felt throughout the military. Soldiers and marines have faced a steady cycle of predeployment training and exercises, deployment itself, and postdeployment reassignment and unit regeneration. Service members not on deployment are nonetheless busy planning and supporting military operations, caring for injured service members, and attending to recruiting, training, and other responsibilities at home and abroad. Many service members are married, and deployments have disrupted their family routines and created stress from separation and reintegration. At the same time, the long hours, tension, uncertainty, and violence of deployments have stressed the service members sent to fight. Remarkably, despite the pressures from deployments on service members and their families, reenlistment rates have been stable since 2002. The purpose of this monograph is to enhance understanding of whether deployments affected service members' willingness to stay in the military, as the stress caused by deployments would suggest, and how it was that reenlistment held steady.".
- 2009028247 contributor B11426754.
- 2009028247 contributor B11426755.
- 2009028247 contributor B11426756.
- 2009028247 coverage "United States Armed Forces Foreign service.".
- 2009028247 coverage "United States Armed Forces Operational readiness.".
- 2009028247 coverage "United States Armed Forces Recruiting, enlistment, etc.".
- 2009028247 created "2009.".
- 2009028247 date "2009".
- 2009028247 date "2009.".
- 2009028247 dateCopyrighted "2009.".
- 2009028247 description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 149-151).".
- 2009028247 description "Introduction -- Background and review of selected literature -- Modeling deployment and reenlistment -- Data sources and analysis samples -- Econometric model -- Empirical results using survey data -- Empirical results using administrative data -- The role of reenlistment bonuses in sustaining retention -- Conclusion.".
- 2009028247 description "The military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have been the United States' longest military engagements since the Vietnam War and the most severe test of the all-volunteer force, with the possible exception of the Gulf War in 1991. More than 1.5 million service members were deployed between 2002 and 2007, many of them more than once, and the fast pace of deployment has been felt throughout the military. Soldiers and marines have faced a steady cycle of predeployment training and exercises, deployment itself, and postdeployment reassignment and unit regeneration. Service members not on deployment are nonetheless busy planning and supporting military operations, caring for injured service members, and attending to recruiting, training, and other responsibilities at home and abroad. Many service members are married, and deployments have disrupted their family routines and created stress from separation and reintegration. At the same time, the long hours, tension, uncertainty, and violence of deployments have stressed the service members sent to fight. Remarkably, despite the pressures from deployments on service members and their families, reenlistment rates have been stable since 2002. The purpose of this monograph is to enhance understanding of whether deployments affected service members' willingness to stay in the military, as the stress caused by deployments would suggest, and how it was that reenlistment held steady.".
- 2009028247 extent "xix, 151 p. :".
- 2009028247 identifier "0833047337".
- 2009028247 identifier "9780833047335 (pbk. : alk. paper)".
- 2009028247 identifier 2009028247-d.html.
- 2009028247 isPartOf "Rand Corporation monograph series ; MG-873-OSD".
- 2009028247 isPartOf "Rand Corporation monograph series ; MG-873-OSD.".
- 2009028247 issued "2009".
- 2009028247 issued "2009.".
- 2009028247 language "eng".
- 2009028247 publisher "Santa Monica, CA : RAND,".
- 2009028247 spatial "United States Armed Forces Foreign service.".
- 2009028247 spatial "United States Armed Forces Operational readiness.".
- 2009028247 spatial "United States Armed Forces Recruiting, enlistment, etc.".
- 2009028247 spatial "United States.".
- 2009028247 subject "355.2/23620973 22".
- 2009028247 subject "UB323 .H6687 2009".
- 2009028247 subject "War on Terrorism, 2001-2009 Manpower United States.".
- 2009028247 tableOfContents "Introduction -- Background and review of selected literature -- Modeling deployment and reenlistment -- Data sources and analysis samples -- Econometric model -- Empirical results using survey data -- Empirical results using administrative data -- The role of reenlistment bonuses in sustaining retention -- Conclusion.".
- 2009028247 title "How have deployments during the war on terrorism affected reenlistment? / James Hosek, Francisco Martorell.".
- 2009028247 type "text".