Description

Book Synopsis
Bailey tells the story of the all-volunteer force from the 1960s through the Iraq War. Based on archival research and interviews with Army officers and recruiters, ad executives, and policy makers, America’s Army confronts political, moral, and social issues a volunteer force raises for a democratic society and for the defense of our nation.

Trade Review
Compact, comprehensive, and empathetic, America's Army provides a much-needed account of the all-volunteer army, from its difficult birth after Vietnam down to its challenging present. An important story exceedingly well told. -- Andrew J. Bacevich, author of The New American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by War
Every American should read Beth Bailey's excellent book on America's Army. It brilliantly charts how the huge shift away from the draft came to be and what we might expect in the future. -- The Honorable Patricia Schroeder, Former Congresswoman, Colorado
America's Army will be indispensable reading for anyone who wants to understand how the modern army works and how this democracy 'provides for the common defense.' -- Colonel Matthew Moten, Professor, United States Military Academy at West Point and author of The Delafield Commission and the American Military Profession
An excellent history on a very complicated and controversial topic that deals with such emotional subjects as race, the role of women, and the Army's commitment to combat. -- Brian McAllister Linn, Professor of History, Texas A and M University
The powerful and remarkable story of how the All-Volunteer Force confronted the challenges surrounding race, gender, sexuality and citizenship in creating today's American Army. -- Michael Sherry, author of In the Shadow of War: The United States Since the 1930s
America's Army will become a major addition to the history of the post-Vietnam armed forces. -- Ronald Spector, Professor of History and International Affairs, The George Washington University
Beth Bailey has written an accessible and informative history of the [All-Volunteer Force]. It's a valuable reference work for anyone interested in the armed forces. The book has added value today, given the strain under which the military has found itself in fighting lengthy insurgencies in both Afghanistan and Iraq. -- Doug Bandow * Washington Times *
This excellent analytical history is particularly timely. It thoroughly surveys the volunteer force's emergence from the so-called "hollow army" over the past decades, and it analyzes such specific issues as the effect on gender roles of the greater number of women in service, the effect on career patterns due to the absence of a draft, and how to instill the warrior ethos, assuming that that is still necessary in an age of high-tech combat. The ultimate questions raised are whether the all-volunteer force doesn't sacrifice civic responsibility to individual liberty and what the answer to that question implies. Intensely serious, painstakingly thorough, and deserving addition to collections concerned with military and current affairs. -- Roland Green * Booklist *

Table of Contents
* Prologue * Individual Freedom and the Obligations of Citizenship * Repairing the Army * The Army in the Marketplace * Race, "Quality," and the Hollow Army *"If you like Ms., you'll love pvt." * The All-Recruited Army * The Army as Social Good * The Warrior Ethos * Notes * Acknowledgments * Index

Americas Army Making the AllVolunteer Force

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    A Hardback by Beth Bailey

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      View other formats and editions of Americas Army Making the AllVolunteer Force by Beth Bailey

      Publisher: Harvard University Press
      Publication Date: 11/20/2009 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780674035362, 978-0674035362
      ISBN10: 0674035364

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Bailey tells the story of the all-volunteer force from the 1960s through the Iraq War. Based on archival research and interviews with Army officers and recruiters, ad executives, and policy makers, America’s Army confronts political, moral, and social issues a volunteer force raises for a democratic society and for the defense of our nation.

      Trade Review
      Compact, comprehensive, and empathetic, America's Army provides a much-needed account of the all-volunteer army, from its difficult birth after Vietnam down to its challenging present. An important story exceedingly well told. -- Andrew J. Bacevich, author of The New American Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by War
      Every American should read Beth Bailey's excellent book on America's Army. It brilliantly charts how the huge shift away from the draft came to be and what we might expect in the future. -- The Honorable Patricia Schroeder, Former Congresswoman, Colorado
      America's Army will be indispensable reading for anyone who wants to understand how the modern army works and how this democracy 'provides for the common defense.' -- Colonel Matthew Moten, Professor, United States Military Academy at West Point and author of The Delafield Commission and the American Military Profession
      An excellent history on a very complicated and controversial topic that deals with such emotional subjects as race, the role of women, and the Army's commitment to combat. -- Brian McAllister Linn, Professor of History, Texas A and M University
      The powerful and remarkable story of how the All-Volunteer Force confronted the challenges surrounding race, gender, sexuality and citizenship in creating today's American Army. -- Michael Sherry, author of In the Shadow of War: The United States Since the 1930s
      America's Army will become a major addition to the history of the post-Vietnam armed forces. -- Ronald Spector, Professor of History and International Affairs, The George Washington University
      Beth Bailey has written an accessible and informative history of the [All-Volunteer Force]. It's a valuable reference work for anyone interested in the armed forces. The book has added value today, given the strain under which the military has found itself in fighting lengthy insurgencies in both Afghanistan and Iraq. -- Doug Bandow * Washington Times *
      This excellent analytical history is particularly timely. It thoroughly surveys the volunteer force's emergence from the so-called "hollow army" over the past decades, and it analyzes such specific issues as the effect on gender roles of the greater number of women in service, the effect on career patterns due to the absence of a draft, and how to instill the warrior ethos, assuming that that is still necessary in an age of high-tech combat. The ultimate questions raised are whether the all-volunteer force doesn't sacrifice civic responsibility to individual liberty and what the answer to that question implies. Intensely serious, painstakingly thorough, and deserving addition to collections concerned with military and current affairs. -- Roland Green * Booklist *

      Table of Contents
      * Prologue * Individual Freedom and the Obligations of Citizenship * Repairing the Army * The Army in the Marketplace * Race, "Quality," and the Hollow Army *"If you like Ms., you'll love pvt." * The All-Recruited Army * The Army as Social Good * The Warrior Ethos * Notes * Acknowledgments * Index

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