RETENTION OF AIR-FORCE WOMEN SERVING DURING DESERT SHIELD AND DESERT-STORM

Authors
Citation
Pf. Pierce, RETENTION OF AIR-FORCE WOMEN SERVING DURING DESERT SHIELD AND DESERT-STORM, Military psychology, 10(3), 1998, pp. 195-213
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology
Journal title
ISSN journal
08995605
Volume
10
Issue
3
Year of publication
1998
Pages
195 - 213
Database
ISI
SICI code
0899-5605(1998)10:3<195:ROAWSD>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
The Gulf War stimulated the largest deployment of military women in U. S. history, raising many issues concerning the postwar readjustment of women as well as their willingness to continue in the military follow ing wartime service. In this article, I identify and describe multiple factors that contribute most directly to women's decision to leave or remain in military service. A stratified sample of 525 women particip ated in one telephone interview and two successive self-administered q uestionnaires 2 years following Desert Storm. The sampling frame was s tratified on the following factors: component of the Air Force (active , guard, or reserve), deployment tin the theater or elsewhere), and pa rental status (parents or nonparents). A descriptive profile of leaver s and stayers is provided. The greatest attrition occurred among women who gave birth to a child between the beginning of the war and time o f the survey, those reporting greater financial strain, and those hold ing a more negative view of military service as a result of their Gulf War experience. Analyses of open-ended questions provided the most fr equent and critical reasons given by women who left military service f ollowing Desert Storm. These findings strongly indicate that retention of women in the Air Force is related less to the inevitable need for deployment than to the addressable issues of family support and work e nvironment.