학술논문

호주군 여성인력의 활용과 우리군에 주는 시사점
A Study on the case of Application of Women's Personnel in the Australian Defence Force
Document Type
Article
Text
Source
The Journal of the Convergence on Culture Technology (JCCT), 10/31/2023, Vol. 9, Issue 5, p. 269-273
Subject
여성인력
병력부족
역할확대
시사점
규정보안
Female Manpower
Lack of troops
Expanding roles
Implications
Supplementing Regulations
Language
한국어(KOR)
ISSN
2384-0358
Abstract
After participating in the Second Boer War in 1899, the Australian Army participated in world wars such as World War I, World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. To overcome the decline in the social recognition of soldiers and the continuous shortage of troops caused by the protracted war, the status and role of female personnel were expanded. The use of female manpower, which started as medical support during the Second Boer War, expanded to combat support missions such as communications, maintenance, driving, secret document management, and radar surveillance during World War II. After the Vietnam War, the Chiefs of Staff of the Australian Army, Navy and Air Force established a committee to expand women's participation in the military, improved service conditions for female personnel and supplemented regulations so that they were treated as soldiers, not women, and reached a turning point in expanding the role of female personnel in the Australian military. As a result, all combat positions, including special forces, were opened to women in 2014, and a plan was established to increase the proportion of women in each service by 2030. As a result, all combat positions, including special forces, were opened to women in 2014, and the Australian Armed Forces set a plan to increase the proportion of women by 2030. Like the Australian military, South Korea is also experiencing a demographic cliff and shortage of troops due to the continuing low birthrate problem. Through the history and current state of the use of female personnel in the Australian military, we would like to draw implications for the direction our military should go.