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Traumatology, Vol. 13, No. 4, 24-31 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1534765607309951

Battlefield Ethics

Carl A. Castro

Medical Research and Materiel Command, AMEDD Washington, DC, Carl.Castro{at}NA.AMEDD.army.mil

Dennis McGurk

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research Silver Spring, Maryland

This is the second article derived from the MHAT-IV public domain report and is the first attempt to address the issue of battlefield ethics in the current Iraq war. The study summarized here attempted to address the ethical behavior associated with the treatment of insurgents and noncombatants, battlefield ethical actions and decisions associated with perceived rules of engagement, reporting of violation of such rules, and battlefield ethics training. Each area was assessed using either a five- or six-item questionnaire designed for this study. They were part of the same larger MHAT-IV study noted in the previous article. The article reports the results using a series of figures.

Key Words: battlefield ethics • atrocities • combat stress • military behavioral health • torture • MHAT-IV

References

  • Thomson, M.H., Adams, B.D., & Sartori, J.A. (2005). Moral and ethical decision making literature review (DRDC Toronto No. CR-2005-105). Guelph, Ontario, Canada: Department of National Defence.

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This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
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