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An analysis of the incidence of recruiter irregularities

Title
An analysis of the incidence of recruiter irregularities / Beth Asch, Paul Heaton.
ISBN
9780833050205
0833050206
Published
Santa Monica, CA : RAND, 2010.
Physical Description
xv, 52 p. : col. ill. ; 28 cm.
Notes
"RAND National Defense Research Institute."
"This research ... was conducted within the Forces and Resource Policy Center of the RAND National Defense Research Institute"--Pref.
Summary
The authors examine the prevalence and consequences of irregularities by military recruiters. Recruiter irregularities are uncommon -- using the services' data for tracking allegations between 2007-2009, the authors document about 1 allegation per 1,000 applicants. Between 1 to 3 percent of the recruiter workforce is involved in substantiated allegations in a given year, with concealment or falsification representing the most common form of irregularity. Exploring Army contract data, the authors compare the characteristics of those signing contracts at the end of the recruiting month -- when recruiters are under the greatest pressure to meet their monthly recruiting quotas -- with those signed earlier in the month. Recruiters appear less likely to carefully screen recruits and more likely to sign marginal applicants at the end of the contract month, leading to some negative outcomes among these enlistees. While undesirable behavior on the part of applicants and/or recruiters appears more prevalent at the end of the recruiting month, patterns in contracts across the course of the recruiting month also suggest the incidence of unreported irregularities is likely to be low.
Other formats
Also available on the internet via WWW in PDF format.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
April 20, 2011
Series
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 51-52).
Contents
Introduction
Background on Recruit Processing and Recruiter Management
Data
Results on Allegations
Analyses of Contract Data
Conclusions
Appendix A: Overview of Recruiting Policies and Procedures Regarding Improprieties
Appendix B: Derivations.
Citation

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