Reserve Soldiers as Transmigrants

Author:

Lomsky-Feder Edna1,Gazit Nir1,Ben-Ari Eyal1

Affiliation:

1. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem,

Abstract

This article suggests a new perspective for examining the particular social and organizational characteristics of military reserves forces and the special experiences of serving in the reserves. To illustrate the unique social position of reservists, the authors develop a theoretical model that likens them to transmigrants. Accordingly, the authors suggest that society may benefit from looking at reserves both as sorts of social and organizational hybrids or amalgams—they are soldiers and civilians, they are outside yet inside the military system, and are invested in both spheres—and as continual migrants journeying between military and civilian spheres. The authors end by suggesting that it may be fruitful to study three segments of the military, each of which has its own dynamics: regulars, conscripts, and reserves. This differentiation allows society to examine different patterns of motivation, cohesion, political commitment and awareness, and long-term considerations that characterize each segment.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Safety Research,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Sociology and Political Science

Reference88 articles.

1. Comparing Army Reserve Forces: A Tale of Multiple Ironies, Conflicting Realities, and More Certain Prospects

2. Eyal Ben-Ari, Edna Lomsky-Feder, and Nir Gazit, "Notes on the Study of Military Reserves: Between the Military and Civilian Spheres," in Building Sustainable and Effective Military Capabilities: A Systematic Comparison of Professional and Conscript Forces , ed. Kristina Spohr-Readman ( Amsterdam: IOS Press, 2004), 64-78.

3. Terry C. Willett, "The Military Infra-Structure of Contemporary Canada: The Case of the Militia," in Supplementary Military Forces: Reserves, Militias, Auxiliaries, ed. Louis A. Zurcher and Gwyn Harries-Jenkins (Beverly Hills: Sage, 1978), 126-51.

4. The National Guard in Politics

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