No Women’s Land: Australian Women Veterans’ Experiences of the Culture of Military Service and Transition

Author:

Lawn Sharon123ORCID,Waddell Elaine12,Roberts Louise12ORCID,Rioseco Pilar4,Beks Tiffany25,Sharp Tiffany26,McNeill Liz12ORCID,Everitt David27,Bowes Lee27,Mordaunt Dylan128ORCID,Tarrant Amanda29ORCID,Van Hooff Miranda10,Lane Jonathan11ORCID,Wadham Ben12

Affiliation:

1. Flinders University, Adelaide, SA 5042, Australia

2. Open Door Initiative, Flinders University, Adelaide, SA 5042, Australia

3. Lived Experience Australia, Adelaide, SA 5042, Australia

4. Australian Institute of Family Studies, Melbourne, VIC 3006, Australia

5. School of Education, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada

6. Cambrian Executive, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia

7. Defence Force Welfare Association SA, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia

8. Southern Adelaide Local Health Network, Adelaide, SA 5042, Australia

9. Veterans SA, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia

10. Military and Services Health Australia (MESHA), Adelaide, SA 5011, Australia

11. Department of Psychiatry, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS 7005, Australia

Abstract

Women’s experiences of military service and transition occur within a highly dominant masculinized culture. The vast majority of research on military veterans reflects men’s experiences and needs. Women veterans’ experiences, and therefore their transition support needs, are largely invisible. This study sought to understand the role and impact of gender in the context of the dominant masculinized culture on women veterans’ experiences of military service and transition to civilian life. In-depth qualitative interviews with 22 Australian women veterans elicited four themes: (1) Fitting in a managing identity with the military; (2) Gender-based challenges in conforming to a masculinized culture—proving worthiness, assimilation, and survival strategies within that culture; (3) Women are valued less than men—consequences for women veterans, including misogyny, sexual harassment and assault, and system failures to recognize women’s specific health needs and role as mothers; and (4) Separation and transition: being invisible as a woman veteran in the civilian world. Gendered military experiences can have long-term negative impacts on women veterans’ mental and physical health, relationships, and identity due to a pervasive masculinized culture in which they remain largely invisible. This can create significant gender-based barriers to services and support for women veterans during their service, and it can also impede their transition support needs.

Funder

The Hospital Research Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

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