- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Politics / International Relations
Full Description
The exercise of public power by the military in civilian Western democracies such as Australia and the United States demonstrates a tendency toward failure in responsibility for moral behavior. Pauline Collins argues that a different system of military criminal investigation and discipline outside the civilian justice system enables the military to operate like a coterie and can lead to a failure in the requisite moral standard of behavior required of military personnel and maintaining civilian institutional control. Collins argues that the justifications for separate treatment of weakens both the military standing and the practice of civilian control of the military as well as leading to an overall decline in morality and values in a democratic society.
Contents
Chapter One: The Military: A Separate Society and Its Morality
Chapter Two: The US Military Experience - Discipline and sexual offending
Chapter Three: Survivors, Perpetrators and the Institutional Responses
Chapter Four: The Australian Military Experience - Discipline and morality
Chapter Five: Lessons from Others
Chapter Six: Concerns and Consequences for the Continuation of Separate Societies
Chapter Seven: Reform necessary for Respect and Discipline