SİLAHLI KUVVETLERDEKİ ROL YÖNELİMSEL DEĞİŞİKLİKLER: MOSKOS'UN KURUM-MESLEK MODELİNE YÖNELİK BİR DEĞERLENDİRME

20’inci yüzyıl dünya silahlı kuvvetlerinde hızlı bir şekilde zorunlu askerlik uygulamasından gönüllü askerlik uygulamasına geçişin yaşandığı bir döneme şahitlik etmiştir. Bu yöndeki eğilim günümüzde halen devam etmektedir. Zorunlu askerlik uygulamasından gönüllü askerlik uygulamasına geçiş aynı zamanda kurum olarak askerlik anlayışının meslek olarak askerlik anlayışına doğru evrilmesine de sebep olmuştur. Bu kapsamda, Charles C. Moskos’un silahlı kuvvetlerin bir kurum modelinden yavaş yavaş ama sürekli bir şekilde bir meslek modeline geçiş halinde olduğunu iddia ettiği “Kurum-Meslek Modeli” dünya silahlı kuvvetlerinde meydana gelmekte olan hızlı değişimlere ışık tutabilecek niteliktedir. Bu çalışmada, Türk Silahlı Kuvvetleri’nde de son dönemde meydana gelmekte olan rol yönelimsel değişimlere ışık tutabilecek olan Kurum-Meslek modeli ele alınmış, mevcut uygulamaları ve modele yönelik eleştiriler incelenmiş ve model hakkında genel bir değerlendirmede bulunulmuştur. 

Changes In The Role Orientations of The Armed Forces: An Evaluation On The Moskos’ Institution-Occupation Model

The 20th century witnessed an era in which a quick transition occurred from the application of draft to the application of the all-volunteer force in the armed forces throughout the world. This trend still continues today. The transition in armies from draft to the all-volunteer force also has caused the institutional military understanding to evolve into an occupational military understanding. In this regard, the “Institutional-Occupational Model,” in which Charles C. Moskos claims that the armed forces has been in a gradual transition from an institutional model to an occupational model, is such as to shed light on the rapid changes occurring in the armed forces. In this respect, this study addresses the Institutional-Occupational Model, which might also shed light on the recent changes in the role orientations of the Armed Forces of many countries, examines the model’s current applications and criticisms towards it, and provides an overall evaluation of the model.

___

  • Alpass, Fiona, Nigel Long, Carol Macdonald ve Kerry Chamberlain. (1999). The Moskos Institution-Occupation Model: Effects on Individual Work Related Perceptions and Experiences in the Military. Journal of Political and Military Sociology. 27:67-80.
  • Bachman, Jerald G., John D. Blair ve David R. Segal. (1977). The All-Volunteer Force. Ann Arbor: A Study of Ideology in the Military. University of Michigan Press. Bell, John M. (1986). Professional Military Education: Tasks, Topics, Needs. Armed Forces & Society. 12:419-430.
  • Caforio, Giuseppe. (1988). The Military Profession: Theories of Change. Armed Forces & Society. 15:55-69.
  • Cotton, Charles A. (1981). Institutional and Occupational Values in Canada’s Army. Armed Forces & Society. 8:99-110.
  • Durkheim, Emile. (1949). The Division of Labor in Society, Trans. By G. Simpson. Glencoe, IL: Free Press.
  • Feld, M. D. (1975). Military Professionalism and the Mass Army. Armed Forces & Society. 1:191-214.
  • Goffman, Erving. (1961). On the Characteristics of Total Institutions. In Symposium on Preventive and Social Psychiatry (pp. 43-84).
  • Gouldner, A. W. (1957). Cosmopolitans and Locals: Toward an Analysis of Latent Social Roles. Administrative Science Quarterly. 62:281-306.
  • Huntington, Samuel P. (1957). The Soldier and the State. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
  • Janowitz, Morris. (1960). The Professional Soldier. New York: Free Press.
  • Janowitz, M. (1977). From Institutional to Occupational: The Need for Conceptual Continuity. Armed Forces & Society. 4:51-54.
  • Janowitz, Morris ve Charles C. Moskos. (1974). Racial Composition in the All-Volunteer Force. Armed Forces & Society. 1:109-123.
  • Kasurak, Peter. (2011). Concepts of Professionalism in the Canadian Army, 1946-2000: Regimentalism, Reaction, and Reform. Armed Forces & Society. 37:95-118.
  • Merton, Robert K. (1957). Social Theory and Social Structure. Chicago: Free Press of Glencoe.
  • Moskos, Charles. (1976). Armed Forces in American Society: From Institution to Occupation. Proceedings, Fifth Symposium on Psychology in the Air Force, U.S. Air Force Academy. 1-5.
  • Moskos, Charles C. (1977). From Institution to Occupation: Trends in Military Organization. Armed Forces & Society. 4(1):41-50.
  • Moskos, Charles C. (1981). Making the All-Volunteer Force Work: A National Service Approach. Foreign Affairs. 17-34.
  • Moskos, Charles C. (1986). Institutional/Occupational Trends in Armed Forces: An Update. Armed Forces & Society. 12:377-382.
  • Moskos, Charles C. and Frank R. Wood. (1988). The Military: More than Just a Job? Potomac Books Inc.
  • Segal, David R. (1975). Civil-Military Relations in the Mass Public. Armed Forces & Society. 1:215-229.
  • Segal, David R. (1977). Worker Participation and the Future Management of the Armed Forces. In Military Unions, edited by William J. Taylor, Jr., Roger J. Arango, and Robert S. Lockwood. Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage.
  • Segal, David. (1986). Measuring the Institutional/Occupational Change Thesis. Armed Forces & Society. 12:351-376.
  • Segal, David R. ve Mady W. Segal. (1970). Models of Civil-Military Relations at the Elite Level. Working Papers of the Center for Research on Social Organization, Department of Sociology, University of Michigan.
  • Segal, David R., Mary Scheuer Senter ve Mady Wechsler Segal. (1978). The Civil-Military Interface in a Metropolitan Community. Armed Forces & Society. 4:423-448.
  • Segal, David R., Barbara Ann Lynch ve John D. Blair. (1979). The Changing American Soldier: Work-Related Attitudes of U.S. Army Personnel in World War II and the 1970s. American Journal of Sociology. 85(1):95-108.
  • Segal, David R. ve Mady W. Segal. (1983). Change in Military Organizations. Annual Review of Sociology. 9:151-170.
  • Stahl, Michael J., T. Roger Manley ve Charles W. McNichols. (1978). Operationalizing the Moskos Institution-Occupation Model: An Application of Gouldner’s Cosmopolitan-Local Research. Journal of Applied Psychology. 63: 422-427.
  • Stahl, Michael J., Charles W. McNichols ve T. Roger Manley. (1980). An Empirical Examination of the Moskos Institution-Occupation Model. Armed Forces & Society. 6:257-269.
  • Stahl, Michael J., Charles W. McNichols ve T. Roger Manley. (1981). A Longitudinal Test of The Moskos Institution-Occupation Model: A Three-Year Increase in Occupational Scores. Journal of Political and Military Sociology. 9:43-47.
  • Toennies, Ferdinand. (1957). Community and Society. Trans. By C. P. Loomis. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press.