Think! Evidence

Military education and the study of War

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dc.creator Jeffrey Grey
dc.date 2012-02-01T00:00:00Z
dc.date.accessioned 2015-07-20T20:08:42Z
dc.date.available 2015-07-20T20:08:42Z
dc.identifier 10.5787/30-1-163
dc.identifier 2224-0020
dc.identifier https://doaj.org/article/a198eab7a3ab4b0d987fbd594d38b2ad
dc.identifier.uri http://evidence.thinkportal.org/handle/123456789/8410
dc.identifier.uri https://doaj.org/article/a198eab7a3ab4b0d987fbd594d38b2ad
dc.description <p>The education of officers has attracted considerable attention in recent times, especially as Western armies have moved inexorably towards the all-volunteer military as the basis of their organisations. American failure in Vietnam placed renewed emphasis on notions of military professionalism, and at the same time drew attention to the decline in the serious study of war within the US armed forces. As part of this renewed attention to war and its nature, the forces directed their gaze once again to history and to military history in particular. The argument advanced was that the US Army's higher schooling system had turned away from the study of history in the course of the 1950s, such that in the 1960s the Army had consequently paid the price for 'the neglect of the lessons of the past'. The Army's Ad Hoc Committee on the Need for the Study of Military History found in 1971 that less attention was paid to military history in the service schools than at any time since before the Second World War. The introduction of a 'progressive co-ordinated history program' at all levels of the Army educational system which it recommended was designed to return the Army to its 'traditional reliance upon the experience of history' while restoring the spirit of professionalism and sense of mission which Vietnam had eroded so badly.</p>
dc.language English
dc.publisher University of Stellenbosch. Faculty of Military Science (Military Academy)
dc.relation http://scientiamilitaria.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/163
dc.relation https://doaj.org/toc/2224-0020
dc.source Scientia Militaria : South African Journal of Military Studies, Vol 30, Iss 1 (2012)
dc.subject 'the neglect of the lessons of the past'
dc.subject 'progressive co-ordinated history program'
dc.subject American failure in Vietnam placed renewed emphasis on notions of military professionalism
dc.subject Military Science
dc.subject U
dc.subject DOAJ:Military Science
dc.subject DOAJ:Technology and Engineering
dc.subject Military Science
dc.subject U
dc.subject DOAJ:Military Science
dc.subject DOAJ:Technology and Engineering
dc.subject Military Science
dc.subject U
dc.subject Military Science
dc.subject U
dc.subject Military Science
dc.subject U
dc.title Military education and the study of War
dc.type Article


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