000 01189cam a2200145 4500
100 1 _aDOBOS Ned
245 _aWar as a workplace:
_bethical implications of the occupational shift/
_cNed Dobos
260 _c2019
520 _aSoldiering has traditionally been thought of as something radically different from a job or career, but things are changing. Sociologists have observed an "occupational shift" in military service. A corollary is that soldiers are part of the workforce, and an ethical implication is that soldiers are presumptively entitled to the protection of workplace rights. In recent years, the push to have this acknowledged has gained momentum. The present article begins to explore what it would mean in practice if standard workplace rights were extended to armed forces personnel. The question, more specifically, is how this would constrain the war-making privileges of the state.
650 _aWORKPLACE
_xMILITARY
650 _aMILITARY
773 _aJournal of Military Ethics:
_gVol 18, No. 3, October 2019, pp. 248-260 (63A)
856 _uhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15027570.2019.1689613
_zClick link for online access
945 _i64821.1001
_rY
_sY
999 _c39068
_d39068