User:Johnduffy23/sandbox

Bibliography for: Military communications
- This article is compiled with loads of information pulled from a variety of different reliable sources. It uses evidence and historical facts that will help get a sense of how communication methods have evolved specifically in the U.S. military.

- The NCA Communications article explains communication the expectations by position and rank. It gets into the specifics of the heirarchy, describing how there are reviews of a division’s bylaws every five years to ensure that bylaws remain consistent with current NCA policies, and also explains some communication practices within certain divisions.

- The Communication Currents database has a section where it discusses how military bloggers, or "milbloggers", have continued to find new ways to explore the uses of technology to express their fears, frustrations, interpretations, and observations about war by openly posting their thoughts in blogs on the Internet. This article gives an analysis of what methods are being used to do this, and how they are being used.

- In another essay from Communication Currents, it covers how Military families in the U.S. are frequent deployments and other military-related separations that put a strain on their communication and relationships. These separations are stressful not only for the military members that deploy, but for the family members they leave behind. This essay goes over the many communication barriers that are implimented, and what actions have been taken in the past and the present.

- In today's world, more people are increasingly using social media as an important part of their public affairs and engagement with others. This article took a closer look on a study of the United States Coast Guard’s (USCG) social media team and efforts. The author claims that public sector communication is unique from business and nonprofit communication, and explores the reasons as to why the public sector, including the military, needs its own theories and practices.

- Stand Down brings together scholars from a variety of backgrounds and different perspectives to center communication in an effort to investigate extremism and White nationalism within the United States military (USM). It challenges upcoming students to take initiative and continue to look into this research so that citizens can continue to support the needs of a diverse combat force and mission success of the USM. By showing these arguments, it shows how far we've come since the second world war, back when we had segregation within our armed forces that caused a number of misconceptions within our ranks.

- While serving in the USM, there is a high risk factor depending on the occupation, especially while active duty. This article discusses risk management, a decision-support process that is a vital tool for military planning and decision making. It covers the strengths and challenges that are implimented during an operation, and goes over the many considerations one might make if they are serving.

- Technology continues to infleunce new innovations that are used in many aspects of our lives today. Advanced communication satellites are one of the many innovations that are more commonly used today in many militaries across the world. The modern battlefield as we know it is being revolutionised, and this article discusses the impacts of new countries gaining access to this highly sophisticated technology.

- Efficient communication is essential to effective team coordination. More specifically, this article discusses the use of specialized military terms with specific meanings that are essential to accurate communications, and also helps keep messages short. The article analyzes the communications recorded during a navy training excercise,giving plenty of information on what is used in today's time and in the past.

- Military service members are a highly trusted group as we know, and this article devises an environmental communication strategy that attributes proclimate messages to military service members, aimed at convincing conservative climate skeptics to express elevated concern. The article gives several perspectives that all revolve around the idea of how the military can take action and still effectivley communicate with the public during times of extreme weather.