Loyal service and yet "demobbed": demobilization and the economic reintegration of South African demobilized military personnel
OUTPUT TYPE: Journal Article
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2003
TITLE AUTHOR(S): I.Liebenberg, R.Ferreira, M.Roefs
KEYWORDS: ARMED FORCES, INTEGRATION, MOBILITY
DEPARTMENT: Developmental, Capable and Ethical State (DCES)
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 3498
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/7104
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/7104
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
-
Related Research Outputs:
- Integrating services, marginalizing patients: psychiatric patients and primary health care in South Africa
- Managing African conflicts: the challenge of military intervention
- Deracialisation of schools in South Africa: challenges and implications for educators
- Civil control over security institutions in South Africa: notes on replicating the experience in Africa
- Civil control over security institutions in South Africa: suggestions for the future and notes on replicating the experience in Africa
- Truth and reconciliation, civil-military relations and the restructuring of the new SANDF
- Flight of the flamingos: a study on the mobility of R&D workers
- School integration: local and international perspectives
- Chasing credentials and mobility: engaging with private higher education in South Africa
- Chasing credentials and mobility: private higher education in South Africa
- Reflections on school integration: colloquium proceedings
- Confronting the region: a profile of southern Africa
- School integration must be a total system
- Perspectives of school governing bodies on best practices in desegregated schools: preliminary findings
- 'Tomorrow will be better than today': delivery in the age of hope
- Introduction: African integration and civil society
- Mapping and modeling disease risk among mobile populations
- Up in arms
- In search of best practice in South African desegregated schools
- Patterns of residential mobility amongst children in greater Johannesburg-Soweto, South Africa: observations from the Birth to Twenty Cohort