Textbooks of Military Medicine: Military Preventive Medicine, Mobilization and Deployment, V. l, 2003

Textbooks of Military Medicine: Military Preventive Medicine, Mobilization and Deployment, V. l, 2003

Author:

Publisher: Government Printing Office

Published:

Total Pages: 728

ISBN-13: 9780160873119

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Textbooks of Military Medicine. Patrick Kelley, specialty editor. Explores the various natural and manmade challenges faced by today's soldier upon mobilization and deployment. Offers comprehensive research on a range of topics related to preventive medicine, including a historic perspective on the principles of military preventive medicine, national mobilization and training, preparation for deployment, and occupational and environmental issues during sustainment.


Science and the Pacific War

Science and the Pacific War

Author: Roy M. MacLeod

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 1999-12-31

Total Pages: 354

ISBN-13: 9780792358510

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In 1995, the fiftieth anniversary of the end of the Second World War occasioned many reflections on the place of science and technology in the conflict. That the war ended with Allied victory in the Pacific theatre, inevitably focussed attention upon the Pacific region, and particularly upon the Manhattan project and its outcome. It was in the Pacific that Western physics and engineering gave birth to the Atomic Age. However, the Pacific war had also proved a testing time, and a testing space, for other disciplines and institutions. Extreme environments and opemtional distances, and the fundamental demands of logistics, required the Allies and the Japanese to innovate many scientific and technological practices. Just as medicine and botany were called upon to fight tropical diseases and insect pests, so engineers, anthropol ogists and geographers were called upon to understand local conditions and cli mates, and to work with local peoples whose traditional lives were changed forever by the experience. At the same time, the war played midwife to a host of new de velopments, not least in scientific intelligence and in chemical and biological weapons, which were to acquire far greater importance after 1945.


Missions for Science

Missions for Science

Author: David McBride

Publisher: Rutgers University Press

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 338

ISBN-13: 9780813530673

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This historical analysis explores how disease control aid from the U.S., along with shifting environmental factors, affected the development of Atlantic regions with populations of predominantly African ancestry: the southern United States, the Panama Canal Zone, Haiti, and Liberia. McBride (African American history, Pennsylvania State U.) poses questions such as "what specific technologies and medical resources were transferred by U.S. institutions to black population centers, and why?" McBride also discusses how those regions, with historical ties to the U.S., independently envisioned and utilized technology and science in their formation. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR