| Sign In to gain access to subscriptions and/or personal tools. |
Does Social Cohesion Determine Motivation in Combat?An Old Question with an Old AnswerUniversity of California-Berkeley maccoun{at}socrates.berkeley.edu
University of Washingtonekier{at}u.washington.edu
University of California-Santa Barbarabelkin{at}polsci.ucsb.edu Based on a new Army War College study of unit cohesion in the Iraq War, Wong et al. argue that successful unit performance is determined by social cohesion (the strength of interpersonal bonds among members) rather than task cohesion (a sense of shared commitment to the units mission). If correct, these conclusions have important implications for scholarship as well as for numerous U.S. military policies such as the Unit Manning System. However, this article disputes their contentions. Wong et al. ignore a large body of empirical research on military and nonmilitary groups showing that social cohesion has no independent impact on performance. They provide no evidence for the representativeness of the interview quotes they cite as evidence for the reliability or validity of their measures. Their methodology fails to meet social science standards for causal inference (e.g., ruling out causal rival factors)
Key Words: military unit cohesion morale Iraq War
Armed Forces & Society, Vol. 32, No. 4,
646-654 (2006) This article has been cited by other articles:
|
|||||||||||||||
