Factors to consider in blending active and reserve manpower within military units /
Harry J. Thie ... [et al.].
- xxiv, 116 pages ; 23 cm
"RAND National Defense Research Institute." "This report was conducted within the Forces and Resources Policy Center of the RAND National Defense Research Institute"--Pg. IV.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 109-116).
Introduction -- Why workforce integration? -- Military workforce integration in theory and practice -- Enabling and constraining factors -- Implications for personnel management -- Workforce integration: other considerations -- Concluding observations and recommendations -- Appendix A: Integration of the active component and reserve components in the Army -- Appendix B: Integration of the active component and reserve components in the Coast Guard -- Appendix C: Integration of the active component and reserve components in the Marine Corps -- Appendix D: Integration of the active component and reserve components in the Air Force -- Appendix E: Integration of the active component and reserve components in the Navy -- Appendix F: Private-sector workforce integration.
The Department of Defense has suggested that "blending" active component and reserve component workforces in military units must be implemented more broadly to better capitalize on the capabilities and strengths of the reserve components, thus leading to a more flexible, capable force. RAND researchers examined existing organizational designs that facilitate integration of the reserve and active workforces to ascertain whether changed personnel management practices are needed to help implement those organizational designs. They reviewed service reports and directives and other relevant literature on the subject, including the organizational change literature, and interviewed service officials and subject matter experts. They conclude that workforce integration efforts aimed at improving operational accomplishment of mission, balancing operations tempo, and increasing capital asset utilization would be more successful than efforts aimed at other goals, such as resolving personnel management differences. The authors recommend that adapting what works within a service to other functional areas in the service is a better near-term workforce integration strategy than replicating forms of integration across services; that the services should provide policy guidance for workforce integration; and that the services should consider performing more evaluation of workforce integration against the goals they have set out for it.