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Living next to a pipeline
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This chapter picks up the thread that retention of trained soldiers is as important as replenishing younger recruits. The military refer to recruitment as ‘inflow’ while veterans (a term that signifies anyone who leaves after starting their contract, no matter how short their service) are classed as ‘outflow’. Beginning and ending with scenes from Armed Forces Day, celebrated in two different Wiltshire towns in 2018 and 2019, the argument is that this pipeline – again a term used in military circles – is empirically more successful in areas near significant bases. The chapter looks first at the issue of army recruitment in local schools, asking how young people and their families might feel about this. This includes a short critique of army advertising campaigns. It then turns to the ‘outflow’ – the category of veteran – taking several examples to explore different aspects. This leads inevitably to a discussion of PTSD and military charities. The chapter ends with a moment in a Quaker Meeting House which offers a space to reflect on the alternatives to the forms of war preparation provided by the local Armed Forces Day celebration.

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England’s military heartland

Preparing for war on Salisbury Plain

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