Desertion was significant drain on the British Army’s slender manpower resources during the Napoleonic Wars, despite severe military justice that could inflict the capital punishment for this military crime. This article explores the reasons why soldiers left the Army and it argues that there were three main wellsprings of desertion: adjustment to life as a soldier; discontent with the service; and opportunities beyond the service. These factors underlay soldiers’ decision to leave the Army, but location also played a crucial aspect, either facilitating or supressing desertion. These causes and influences explain the incidence of desertion at a macro level and also the wide variations in absence rates between individual units. Moreover, des...
Transcriptions of deserter records from The National Archive’s volumes WO 25/2906 and WO 25/2907. Th...
Dereliction of Duty Confederate Soldiers going AWOL In the final months of the Civil War, with Un...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 89-94)This project examines the impact that deserting US sol...
Framed around an account of the last deserter ever to face the firing squad in England, this article...
Drawing from the experiences of 3,126 enlisted men from North Carolina who fought for the Confederac...
Under which circumstances do soldiers and officers desert in a violent domestic conflict? This artic...
The academic examination of military justice is relatively new. Military history has focused on such...
This article uses an exceptional archival source, the register of deserters for the 165th (Acadian) ...
The problem of desertion in the policy of the Confederate States of America (1861-1865)In this artic...
U.K. Reserve Forces, principally the Territorial Army (TA), have been increasingly used since the en...
Scholarship around Napoleonic conscription has often focused on the contest and resistance with whic...
Desertion is one of the most active forms of ordinary resistance of the people to the state pressure...
Unlike most topics pertaining to the history of the American Civil War, the study of desertion has r...
This paper will examine the deserters from the United States Army who, during the Mexican-American W...
Desertion is one of the least understood topics in Civil War studies, though an adequate account of ...
Transcriptions of deserter records from The National Archive’s volumes WO 25/2906 and WO 25/2907. Th...
Dereliction of Duty Confederate Soldiers going AWOL In the final months of the Civil War, with Un...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 89-94)This project examines the impact that deserting US sol...
Framed around an account of the last deserter ever to face the firing squad in England, this article...
Drawing from the experiences of 3,126 enlisted men from North Carolina who fought for the Confederac...
Under which circumstances do soldiers and officers desert in a violent domestic conflict? This artic...
The academic examination of military justice is relatively new. Military history has focused on such...
This article uses an exceptional archival source, the register of deserters for the 165th (Acadian) ...
The problem of desertion in the policy of the Confederate States of America (1861-1865)In this artic...
U.K. Reserve Forces, principally the Territorial Army (TA), have been increasingly used since the en...
Scholarship around Napoleonic conscription has often focused on the contest and resistance with whic...
Desertion is one of the most active forms of ordinary resistance of the people to the state pressure...
Unlike most topics pertaining to the history of the American Civil War, the study of desertion has r...
This paper will examine the deserters from the United States Army who, during the Mexican-American W...
Desertion is one of the least understood topics in Civil War studies, though an adequate account of ...
Transcriptions of deserter records from The National Archive’s volumes WO 25/2906 and WO 25/2907. Th...
Dereliction of Duty Confederate Soldiers going AWOL In the final months of the Civil War, with Un...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 89-94)This project examines the impact that deserting US sol...