TY - CHAP
T1 - Men, masculinities and military organizations
AU - Aktaş, F. Oya
AU - Collinson, David L.
AU - Hearn, Jeff
AU - Sünbüloğlu, Nurseli Yeşim
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 selection and editorial matter, Jeff Hearn, Kadri Aavik, David L. Collinson and Anika Thym. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Militaries and militarism are among the most obviously gendered of all organizational activities. The military is also one of the clearest arenas of social power, violence and killing in their many guises. Military matters are urgent, powerful and lethal. The ways armies and those in them are organized and act are literally questions of life and death for all concerned. This chapter brings together studies on men and masculinities with those in the military and military organizations. Men, militarism and the military are historically, profoundly and blatantly interconnected. These interconnections have often either been simply accepted or it has gone unnoticed that these military persons are largely men. Indeed, many, though not all, armies and other fighting forces of the world have been and still are armies composed mainly of men, young men and boys. Those engaged in active combat and direct fighting in wars are often young men and boys. In the chapter, we address the place of men and masculinities in some key organizational issues in military organization and militarism, most notably recruitment, hierarchies and segregations, disability and veterans, and the impacts of these organizations on civilians, before concluding remarks on wider processes and impacts, on research, scientific and technological organizations, on international relations and geopolitics, and on the environment.
AB - Militaries and militarism are among the most obviously gendered of all organizational activities. The military is also one of the clearest arenas of social power, violence and killing in their many guises. Military matters are urgent, powerful and lethal. The ways armies and those in them are organized and act are literally questions of life and death for all concerned. This chapter brings together studies on men and masculinities with those in the military and military organizations. Men, militarism and the military are historically, profoundly and blatantly interconnected. These interconnections have often either been simply accepted or it has gone unnoticed that these military persons are largely men. Indeed, many, though not all, armies and other fighting forces of the world have been and still are armies composed mainly of men, young men and boys. Those engaged in active combat and direct fighting in wars are often young men and boys. In the chapter, we address the place of men and masculinities in some key organizational issues in military organization and militarism, most notably recruitment, hierarchies and segregations, disability and veterans, and the impacts of these organizations on civilians, before concluding remarks on wider processes and impacts, on research, scientific and technological organizations, on international relations and geopolitics, and on the environment.
KW - 514,1 Sociology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85176443731&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/44497a73-53c2-333c-8697-06f1985b8dbf/
U2 - 10.4324/9781003193579-22
DO - 10.4324/9781003193579-22
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85176443731
SN - 978-1-032-04515-3
SN - 978-1-032-04516-0
T3 - Routledge international handbooks
SP - 262
EP - 275
BT - Routledge Handbook on Men, Masculinities and Organizations
A2 - Hearn, Jeff
A2 - Aavik, Kadri
A2 - Collinson, David L.
A2 - Thym, Anika
PB - Routledge
CY - Abingdon, Oxon
ER -