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British Army Music in the Interwar Years: Culture, Performance, and Influence
This thesis aims to identify how British army bands in the interwar years were a primary stakeholder in the music industry and to explore their role in projecting soft power for the British military. There were approximately 7,000 full-time bandsmen serving in the British army, which was about a third of the total number of musicians in the music profession in the United Kingdom. The War Office was the largest employer of professional musicians in the country and yet there has been very little acknowledgement of the contribution made by this body of musicians, both to the music industry and to the effectiveness of army operations. This thesis uses models from the business and management literature to interrogate the position of British army music within the context of military structures and the music industry in the interwar years. It reveals the extent that residential insitutions were organised to provide young boys for recruitment into the army as bandsmen and how these boys became an integral part of the music industry. It explores how army music set the standard for training and performance while creating sustainability for the music industry, which relied upon the existence of army bands for its business. The thesis then exposes the tempestuous relationship army bands had with the BBC and recording industry, as well as the function the military played in the adoption of an international standard of musical pitch. Finally, it uncovers the effective role and soft power influence of British army bands and their music in the maintenance of British imperial authority, at home and overseas, and the tragic consequences of operating at the forefront of the military campaign in Ireland
Integrating sanitation and environment assessments for use in emergencies
Emergency response is characterised by the need for rapid and effective assessment of the existing
situation to allow for informed decision making. It is within these constraints of limited time and
resources that personnel are expected to implement life sustaining interventions. During this time the
consideration of cross-cutting
issues such as the environment are limited as they are not seen as an
integral part of immediate emergency response. Environmental awareness needs to be improved during
emergency response to avoid future implications for the population and the environment upon which they
depend. This study therefore focused on determining the likelihood of successful integration of
environmental considerations within an existing emergency sanitation assessment. It tested two
assessment methods, one for environmental sanitation and one for environmental impacts in a refugee
camp in Zambia and makes recommendations on the practical application of these frameworks
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