African American Men and Opportunity in the Navy
Personal Histories of Eight Chiefs
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About the Book
The United States military is often presented as a model of equal-opportunity employment. In this work, the author examines and challenges this assertion with respect to the Navy. Dunklin studies Navy claims of meritocracy and training processes, profiles the careers of eight senior enlisted African American servicemen, and examines barriers to African American inclusion. First-hand accounts and interviews provide insight into the coping mechanisms and struggles of African Americans in the Navy. The author concludes by offering suggestions to improve the Navy equal opportunity environment.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Arthur L. Dunklin
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 184
Bibliographic Info: bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2008
pISBN: 978-0-7864-3699-6
eISBN: 978-0-7864-8261-0
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Preface 1
Introduction 3
1. Equal Opportunity and Meritocracy in Practice: Inclusion or Exclusion 7
Claims of Meritocracy in the U.S. Military 7
Meritocracy in the U.S. Navy: Principles and Stated Policies 10
Coping in Organizations of, by, and for Others 16
Summary 19
2. Life and Career in the U.S. Navy 20
Military Training 21
The Promotion Process 22
Mentorship 25
3. Participants’ Profiles 28
Chief Andrews 29
Chief Butler 35
Chief Carter 48
Senior Chief Evanston 54
Senior Chief Gregg 61
Chief Hines 71
Master Chief Ivans 81
Master Chief James 94
4. Barriers to Full Inclusion 108
The Good Ol’ Boys’ Network 109
The In-Group: A View from the Outside 111
The Exceptional Negro 115
Questioning Competence 116
Affirmative Action: Misperceptions of
“Reverse Discrimination” 118
Limited Black Role Models 120
5. Mentorship 123
The Navy’s Formal Mentorship Program 124
Informal Mentorship 127
6. Meritocracy or Myth of Meritocracy? 130
7. Resilience: How They Coped 139
Overachieving 142
Adaptation 143
Minimization 145
Self-Definition 147
8. Profiles in Struggle and Service 152
Competence Questioned 153
In-Group/Out-Group 154
Limited Role Models 156
But They Coped 157
Negative Feelings 160
9. Implications for Navy Policies: A Prescription for Change 161
Reassess the Current State 162
Leadership Top-Down: Create an Equal Opportunity Climate 164
Revise the Current Evaluation System 165
Eliminate the “Just Like Me” Factor 165
Conclusion 166
References 169
Index 175