Academic literature on the topic 'Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve'

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Journal articles on the topic "Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve"

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Perry, Shelley, James Griffith, and Terry White. "Retention of Junior Enlisted Soldiers in the All-Volunteer Army Reserve." Armed Forces & Society 18, no. 1 (October 1991): 111–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0095327x9101800106.

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2

Warburton, Jeni, Robyne Le Brocque, and Linda Rosenman. "Older People—The Reserve Army of Volunteers?: An Analysis of Volunteerism among Older Australians." International Journal of Aging and Human Development 46, no. 3 (January 1, 1998): 229–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/6n5v-td6j-l8d7-by7d.

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In Australia, as in other Western countries, policy-makers are turning their attention to older people, particularly the early retired, as a rich potential source of volunteers. This study examines volunteer behavior in a sample of older Australians in either their immediate pre or post retirement phase. It involves a secondary analysis of data collected for a study on retirement, and seeks to examine the main social and demographic differences between those who volunteer and those who do not. The key concepts associated with volunteering are the availability of 1) time and 2) social and personal resources. Logistic regression analyses revealed that volunteers are significantly more likely to come from the higher occupational classes, are less likely to be self-employed, and are more likely to view their health positively. Implications of these results for social policy are discussed.
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Robinson, SJ. "The Iraq war: experience of a trainee surgeon away from the EWTD." Bulletin of the Royal College of Surgeons of England 89, no. 1 (January 1, 2007): 30–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1308/147363507x161682.

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Senior colleagues often tell the modern trainee surgeon that apparently arduous, long hours can provide some of the best and most rewarding training of a surgical career. In 2003 I was an SHO in general surgery in the West Midlands serving as a part-time territorial officer with 202 Field Hospital (Volunteer). Under the Reserve Forces Act (1996) I was called up for active service in the second Gulf war.
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4

Wang, Jun. "Path and policy analyses: a sustainability study of military workforce supply chains." Journal of Defense Modeling and Simulation: Applications, Methodology, Technology 17, no. 4 (July 15, 2019): 389–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1548512919865381.

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This article presents two case studies using system dynamics to analyze the sustainability of military workforce supply chains. The first case is about multi-period force expansion. An analytical expression is presented to relate the expansion target, training capacity, and expansion period. The system dynamics model forecasts the personnel level achievable against the expansion target for varying input of training capacities. This can be used to inform military force planners about the required training capacity and timeframe to achieve the expansion. The second case examines the sustainability of the deployment of a volunteer-based Army reserve unit. The soldiers’ behavior changes due to their deployment experiences (in terms of willingness to deploy) are modeled and their impact on personnel availability is simulated. The second system dynamics model predicts the personnel level sustainability against the required number of soldiers to deploy. It provides insights regarding the required size of the pool of soldiers to support a deployed Army reserve unit, and promotes policy exploration to boost soldiers’ willingness to deploy. In conclusion, this work demonstrates the applicability of system dynamics to assist decision makers in “raising, training, and sustaining” military workforce supply chains.
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5

Prince, Vinton M. "Book Review: Reserve Forces and the British Territorial Army: A Case study for NATO in the 1990s." Armed Forces & Society 18, no. 1 (October 1991): 143–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0095327x9101800111.

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6

Wright, L. J., and J. P. Owen. "An Audit Of Territorial Army Medical Grades On Presentation For Mobilisation And Full Time Reserve Service At RTMC Chilwell." Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps 148, no. 3 (September 1, 2002): 262–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jramc-148-03-08.

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7

Guštin, Damijan. "Defence of the Republic of Slovenia 1991–2004: from Individual to Collective Defence." Contributions to Contemporary History 56, no. 3 (December 5, 2016): 86–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.51663/pnz.56.3.06.

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Following the successful defence of the country in June and July 1991, the Republic of Slovenia developed its partly unestablished defence system in the light of the instability of the country’s southern neighbourhood that continued to be ravaged by war for the next five years. As an independent country, Slovenia developed its system of national defence in the context of armed neutrality, but with a desire to join Nato and thus transition to a system of collective defence. The Territorial Defence was developed into a regular army and renamed as the Slovenian Armed Forces in 1994. In the circumstances dictated both by restrictions imposed by the UN (arms embargo) as well as the country’s own capacities and available material resources, Slovenia developed a single-type army based on national service and initial large numbers that were gradually reduced. In 1993, the country decided to pursue collective defence as a strategic goal and initiated efforts to join Nato. As Slovenia moved closer to Nato and as the security of its immediate environment changed, numerous reforms of the Army and of the defence sector loomed. During Slovenia's preparations to join Nato from 2000 to 2004, the country abandoned its national service system in 2003 and reformed the Slovenian Armed Forces into a professional army numbering about 7600 professional soldiers, NCOs and officers, as well as an additional limited voluntary reserve force.
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8

Demeshchuk, Anatolii. "The Foundation of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Croatia in 1991." European Historical Studies, no. 6 (2017): 107–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/2524-048x.2017.06.107-119.

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In this article the author regards a history of creating and organizing the regular Armed Forces of Croatian Republic in 1991. The main attention is focused on a land army – the Croatian Army, which was formed in September 1991 on the basis of the National Guard, Territorial defense and different volunteer formations united. The focus has been made on a decisive role of the land forces during the war in Croatia in 1991-1995. The warfare spectrum has been almost entirely overland. However, creating the Croatian navy and air forces has also been shortly described in the article, although the role thereof has been rather insignificant, especially in 1991. Also the article deals with the issue of the Croatian special police forces which played an important role in all the periods of war in Croatia (1991-1995). The issues of Croatian forces’ material provision, ways of armament, their organizational structure and military quality have been analyzed. The course of the Croatian regular army’s forming has been overviewed in chronological and logical sequence. It is concluded that the matter and outcomes of own armed forces’ building by Croatia during its war for independence has been crucial. It is argued that the effective Croatian government’s decisions in a domain of the armed forces in 1991 significantly assisted Croatia to win the war in 1995. The article is based mostly on the Croatian and English academiic and op-ed literature and sources.
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9

Tairova-Yakovleva, Tatiana G. "Structure and Size of the Ukrainian Army in the Russo-Polish War of 1654-1656: Documents of the Little Russia Office from the Russian State Archive of Ancient Acts." Herald of an archivist, no. 3 (2018): 651–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.28995/2073-0101-2018-3-651-662.

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The article draws on previously unknown documents from the Russian State Archive of Ancient Acts to study structure and size of the Ukrainian army under command of I. Zolotarenko, which participated in the Russo-Polish war of 1654-1655. This war with the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was an important event in the history of Central and Eastern Europe, and the first success of a joint Ukrainian-Russian military action in the early modern period. Contrary to the prevailing opinion of the historiography, registers on pay distribution preserved in the ‘Little Russia affairs’ fond allow to assert that I. Zolotarenko’s army numbered 18,000 in enlisted ranks (not counting starshinas); it was divided in 6 regiments and included in addition to registered Cossacks, volunteer Cossacks, hajduks, and German mercenaries. Apropos, this refutes the prevailing assertion that the Zaporozhian Host enlisted no foreign mercenaries. The author also concludes that there was a good reason for Zolotarenko to call himself ‘Severian Hetman.’ He created a kind of ‘superstructure’ over the regiments participating in the campaign, which included army (but not regiment) officers and his own ‘court.’ The documents in question give a sense of how the Ukrainian Hetmanate organized its military campaigns under the direction of specially appointed hetmans. Article also refutes the opinion of modern Ukrainian historians that while administering the oath of regiments in February 1654, the tsar's representatives mechanically transferred whole paragraphs from Cossack registers. In fact, oath books’ structure was fundamentally different from that of Cossack registers. The article also expounds the changes in administrative structure of the hetmanship occurred in 1654. Since the register of I. Zolotarenko's troops is the third list of registered Cossacks known to historians, it is obviously worth publishing. Moreover, the troops’ structure of the Ukrainian hetmanate dovetailed its administrative-territorial division, which underlay all its executive and judicial structures.
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10

Babic, Rade, and Gordana Stankovic-Babic. "Dr Avram Jozef Vinaver (1862-1915): Pioneer of radiology in Serbia." Medical review 68, no. 5-6 (2015): 205–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/mpns1506205b.

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Introduction. Dr Abraham Joseph Vinaver (1862-1915), a Jew from Poland, was a pioneer of radiology in Serbia. He graduated from the Faculty of Medicine in Warsaw (1887), but lived and worked in Sabac (the Kingdom of Serbia) since 1890. Dr Abraham Joseph Vinarev - Career Development. He procured the first X-ray machine and developed radiological service in Sabac five years after the discovery of X-rays. These were the beginnings of radiology in Serbia. He introduced the application of artesian wells. Dr Abraham Joseph Vinarev - a Participant at the First Congress of Serbian Physicians and Naturalists, Belgrade 1904. ?The diagnostic importance of X-rays in lung disease, especially in initial tuberculosis? and ?Five Years of Treatment by X-Ray Machines? were the first works in the field of radiology in Serbia by this author. Dr Abraham Joseph Vinaver - Reserve Medical Officer in the Serbian Army. During the Balkan Wars, he was a volunteer with the rank of major engaged in military corps and he participated in the First World War as well. He died of malaria in 1915 in Gevgelija. ?Dr Avram Vinaver?- Stanislav Vinarev. His dedication to work during the typhus epidemics was put into verses of a poem by his son Stanislav Vinarev. Conclusion. Dr Avram Vinaver Joseph was a noble man with a great heart, who selflessly sacrificed himself for the Serbian people and Serbia. He gave his contribution to the development of health services in Serbia, both in peacetime and wartime conditions. Dr Abraham Joseph Vinaver laid the foundations for today?s radiology in Serbia.
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Books on the topic "Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve"

1

Wyatt, J. T. The Leeds Volunteer Artillery, 1947 - 1971. Leeds: WestRiding Artillery Trust, 1994.

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2

Walker, Wallace Earl. Reserve forces and the British Territorial Army: A case study for NATO in the 1990s. London: Tri-Service Press, 1990.

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3

Cooke, Peter D. F. The Territorials: The history of the territorial and volunteer forces of New Zealand. Auckland, N.Z: Random House, 2011.

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4

C, Bumbera Marlene, ed. The Civil War letters of Cpl. John H. Strathern, Eighth Pennsylvania Reserve Volunteer Corps. Apollo, PA: Closson Press, 1994.

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5

Institute for Security Studies (South Africa), ed. After the commandos: The future of rural policing in South Africa. Pretoria: Institute for Security Studies, 2005.

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6

I, Fergase Susan, ed. All-volunteer and reserve military: Issues and performance. New York: Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2009.

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I, Fergase Susan, ed. All-volunteer and reserve military: Issues and performance. New York: Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2009.

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8

Donald Dean Vc The Memoris Of A Volunteer Territorial From Two World Wars. Pen & Sword Books, 2011.

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9

Stabingas, Sandra Frances. A COMPARISON OF RESERVE OFFICER TRAINING CORPS (ROTC) AND VOLUNTEER ACCESSIONS TO THE ARMY NURSE CORPS IN TERMS OF THEIR ACHIEVEMENT, PERFORMANCE, AND PERCEPTIONS OF CURRENT DUTY AND MILITARY ISSUES: A DESCRIPTIVE STUDY. 1985.

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Book chapters on the topic "Territorial and Army Volunteer Reserve"

1

Setzekorn, Eric. "US Policy and East Asian Allied Projection of Landpower." In Landpower in the Long War, 189–201. University Press of Kentucky, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813177571.003.0012.

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The position of the US Army in Northeast Asia has been strengthened in the past fifteen years due to the force modernization of Taiwanese and South Korea armies. Today, our Asian allies are struggling to balance their identity as vibrant democracies and military requirements. The US Army can play a vital role in improving and accelerating the professionalization of South Korean and Taiwanese land forces and assisting with their creation of more capable reserve system. In addition, because of East Asian demographic and social challenges, the US Army must increase efforts to assist in the transition to a volunteer force in South Korea and Taiwan.
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2

Kornicki, Peter. "The Wavy Navy in the United States." In Eavesdropping on the Emperor, 179–206. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197602805.003.0008.

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In 1943 five junior officers in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve made their way to Boulder, Colorado, to join a course at the US Navy Japanese Language School. The US Navy had turned its attention to Japanese language training before the outbreak of war, largely thanks to the efforts of two intelligence officers who had grown up in Japan. While the US Army began training Japanese Americans, the US Navy Japanese Language School did not accept Japanese Americans as students but did use them as teachers. Most of the five RNVR officers already had extensive naval experience, including combat on the high seas, but they finished their 18-month course too late to be able to play much of a part in the war, unlike their American fellow students, who saw action in the Pacific.
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