"Prepared for the Office of the Secretary of Defense."
Includes bibliographical references (pages 111-115).
Ch. 1. Background -- Ch. 2. Purpose of this Study, Methodology, and Organization -- Ch. 3. Personnel Functions, Aspects, and Alternatives -- Ch. 4. Objectives of the Officer Career Management System -- Ch. 5. Linking Alternatives to Objectives: Evaluation Measures -- Ch. 6. Deriving an Officer Career Management System -- Ch. 7. Concluding Observations.
0
This report is a follow-on to MR-470-OSD, Future Career Management Systems for U.S. Military Officers, 1994. The earlier study determined a range of likely future officer requirements and a number of alternative career management systems. It did not attempt to define a "best" system because it lacked the objectives component--what the system was to accomplish. The current report does design a "best" officer career system, defined as one that most fully satisfies 11 ranked objectives determined by a process that included interviews with a group of senior military and civilian officials. The authors describe the process used to determine the objectives of the career management system and the weights accorded those objectives by policymakers. They then illustrate how the methodology is used and present the career management system that results for line officers. A sensitivity analysis and six appendices are included.
Future officer career management system.
Career development.
Armed Forces-- Officers.
Armed Forces-- Personnel management.
Career development.
POLITICAL SCIENCE-- Political Freedom & Security-- General.
United States, Armed Forces, Officers.
United States, Armed Forces, Personnel management.
United States.
0
0
7
POL-- 035000
355
.
3/31/0973
21
UB413
.
F88
2001
Thie, Harry.
United States., Department of Defense., Office of the Secretary of Defense.