Results 241 to 250 of about 994,047 (310)

Dental health as a determinant of operational readiness in military populations: Evidence from Ceuta (Spain). [PDF]

open access: yesMedicine (Baltimore)
Bel-Blesa A   +8 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Additional Military Organizations

2017
This chapter deals with additional military or quasi-military forces outside the army that operated alongside the army in wartime. They included the Border Guard Forces, that fought in the war against Iran; the Popular Army, the militia of the Ba’ath party that supported the regular army during that war and the one in Kuwait (in 1991); the Kurdish ...
Pesach Malovany   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Suicide prevention in military organizations

International Review of Psychiatry, 2011
Suicide is an important public health problem in the demographic group that forms the bulk of military populations, namely young and middle-aged men. Suicide in the military also has special significance: certain aspects of military service can lead to serious mental disorders that increase the risk of suicidal behaviour.
openaire   +2 more sources

Military Organization Leader Competence

Zarządzanie Zasobami Ludzkimi, 2020
The social and political situation driving ongoing changes in the Polish Army is responsible for a new perspective on viewing the competences of a leader in a military organization. The article presents and discusses the issue of professional competences in the context of professional military service.
Dorota Balcerzyk, Magdalena Zapała
openaire   +1 more source

Military perspectives of organizations

Journal of Organizational Change Management, 1996
As the most common metaphor in organizational literature, the military perspective has greatly influenced business thought and practice. Delineates the various forms taken by the military metaphor in business, and discusses potential explanations for its increasing popularity.
openaire   +1 more source

Management of Military Organization

1981
When I joined the Royal Naval College Dartmouth as a cadet just after World War II, there was no place in the military vocabulary for phrases like ‘management skills’. Everyone had been so busy exercising these skills that there was neither the need nor the spare capacity to study what these skills might be.
openaire   +1 more source

Warfare and Military Organizations

2010
Throughout the period c. 1350–1650, warfare was endemic in European society, and most rulers and members of the political elite were deeply involved with the maintenance and use of armies and navies. Wars and the development of the “military art” (tactics, strategy, and other aspects of the conduct of war) are interesting subjects for historical ...
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy