Gender Integration in Armed Forces: Recent Policy Developments in the United Kingdom

TitleGender Integration in Armed Forces: Recent Policy Developments in the United Kingdom
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1996
AuthorsDandeker, Christopher, and Mady Wechsler Segal
JournalArmed Forces and Society
Volume23
Issue1
Pagination29-47
Date Published10/1996
Abstract

This article reports on recent developments in policy on gender integration in the United Kingdom's armed forces, whereby women's employment opportunities have widened significantly since the early 1980s. These changes include increases in women's representation and the number of positions they are allowed to occupy; abolition of the Women's Royal Army Corps (WRAC) and Women's Royal Naval Service (WRNS); assigning women to combat ships, and training women as jet fighter pilots. Drawing on official reports and statistics and formal interviews with military and civilian defense officials, the authors analyze the main factors that have led the United Kingdom to make these policy changes. These factors are: demographic pressures, sociocultural changes in gender definitions, legal constraints (particularly from the European Union), and changing views of policy makers on whether women can and should serve in combat roles. The article highlights a number of implications of the policy changes.

URLhttps://doi.org/10.1177%2F0095327X9602300102
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