✨ New Arrivals Just Dropped!Explore
Coed Combat: The New Evidence That Women Shouldnt Fight the Nations Wars
HomeStore

Coed Combat: The New Evidence That Women Shouldnt Fight the Nations Wars

Coed Combat: The New Evidence That Women Shouldnt Fight the Nations Wars

$20.75
Coed Combat: The New Evidence That Women Shouldnt Fight the Nations Wars
$20.75

The Story

A scholar makes a definitive, controversial argument against women in combatMore than 155,000 female troops have been deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan since 2002. And more than seventy of those women have died. While thats a small fraction of all American casualties, those deaths exceed the number of military women who died in Korea, Vietnam, and the Gulf War combined.Clearly, women in combat isnt a theoretical issue anymore. Women now fly combat aircraft and serve on warships. Even the remaining allmale corners of the military are blurring the lines in Iraq. And for many advocates, this trend is considered progresstoward a better, gender neutral military.Coed Combat makes the opposite case, based on research in anthropology, biology, history, psychology, sociology, and law, as well as military memoirs. It asks hard questions that challenge the assumptions of feminists.For instance: Has warfare really changed so much as to reverse the almost unanimous history of allmale armed forces? Are men and women really equivalent in combat skills, even leaving aside physical strength? Do female troops respond to traditional types of motivations? Can the bonds of unit cohesion form in a coed military unit? Can an allvolunteer military afford to reject women?This is a controversial book, likely to draw a passionate response from both conservatives and liberals.

Description

A scholar makes a definitive, controversial argument against women in combatMore than 155,000 female troops have been deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan since 2002. And more than seventy of those women have died. While thats a small fraction of all American casualties, those deaths exceed the number of military women who died in Korea, Vietnam, and the Gulf War combined.Clearly, women in combat isnt a theoretical issue anymore. Women now fly combat aircraft and serve on warships. Even the remaining allmale corners of the military are blurring the lines in Iraq. And for many advocates, this trend is considered progresstoward a better, gender neutral military.Coed Combat makes the opposite case, based on research in anthropology, biology, history, psychology, sociology, and law, as well as military memoirs. It asks hard questions that challenge the assumptions of feminists.For instance: Has warfare really changed so much as to reverse the almost unanimous history of allmale armed forces? Are men and women really equivalent in combat skills, even leaving aside physical strength? Do female troops respond to traditional types of motivations? Can the bonds of unit cohesion form in a coed military unit? Can an allvolunteer military afford to reject women?This is a controversial book, likely to draw a passionate response from both conservatives and liberals.

Coed Combat: The New Evidence That Women Shouldnt Fight the Nations Wars | Ergodebooks