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MILITARY STRUCTURE (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   093100


Improving ROK defence capabilities: defence reform for an elite and advanced military / Seoul International Aerospace and Defence Focus   Journal Article
Seoul International Aerospace and Defence Focus Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
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2
ID:   077702


Into the great wide open: the transformation of the German armed forces after 1990 / Janning, Josef; Bauer, Thomas   Journal Article
Janning, Josef Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
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3
ID:   133544


Military structure, civil disobedience, and military violence / Koren, Ore   Journal Article
Koren, Ore Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In this article, I argue that factors inherent to the structure of a military organization and their relationship with the political leadership play a role in the organization's tendency to perpetrate violence against civilians during civil disobedience campaigns. To examine this hypothesis, I conducted a three-phased statistical analysis on a database containing 97 campaigns that took place between 1972 and 2012. In the first phase, I examined the relationship between military centric factors and violent crackdowns. In the second phase, I examined the relationship between military centric factors and mass killing. In the third stage, I examined the relationship between two specific types of discrimination in the military and mass killing. I found strong evidence supporting the hypothesis mentioned above. High-risk militaries that served a militarized regime, contained loosely regulated or indoctrinated paramilitaries, and discriminated against the protesting group, were much more likely to perpetrate violence against civilians during civil disobedience campaigns than low-risk militaries. The conclusions of this study suggest that further examination of the military's role in perpetrating violence against civilians during protests and conflict may provide some novel findings.
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