please see attached
Assignment Directions
This assignment assesses CO-3.
The purpose of this assignment is to select and describe a topic for your final project and start looking for sources. The topic should be one that is of interest to you and related to your future career, concentration within the major, or educational interests. (For example, you can explore the impact of food insecurity on children or healthcare concerns for Veterans). Your final project will be a thorough review of your research topic. Within 4-6 pages you will include the following in your proposal (introduction for your project). Please incorporate at least 4 journal articles no more than three years old.
Background (one to two pages)
The purpose of this assignment (research proposal), is to provoke the interest of the reader. It is also to convince the reader the importance and relevance of the topic. In the opening paragraphs, you want to make sure you introduce the reader to the particular question(s) your thesis is seeking to answer. What are you trying to discover or undercover? The introduction is not merely a summary of points to be elaborated on in later sections. Rather, your objective here is to inform the reader of the question(s), why it is important, and how your thesis will provide an answer.
Background: It may be necessary to provide the reader with some measure of background information relevant to the topic. This is particularly useful when your work is interdisciplinary, in which case it is even more likely that the reader will benefit from a section that contextualizes the question and supplies the history (30-50 years) and terminology so that the reader will be better able to follow the pages. Write it as if the reader is not familiar with the topic or issue. Consider this topic from a sociological framework, incorporating one to two sociological theories into the discussion on the topic.
Statement of the Problem, why it is important to study, and the Purpose of the study. (at least 2.5 pages)
What is the social problem or topic? Why should we as a society study this issue? What is the purpose of this study?
Research Questions – Here you are answering “What are you trying to discover or uncover.” (3-5 questions).
e.g., does where a person lives have an impact on their health outcomes?
Credible Sources.
You want to be sure and include at least four peer-reviewed sociology journal articles no more than three years old. NOTE that the peer reviewed article should have been published in a sociological peer-reviewed journal.
Introduction/Conclusion.
The introduction should include a thesis statement. You want to view your conclusion as a summary of the introduction.
Writing expectations and APA Formatting.
Follows writing expectations and submission is free of spelling and grammar errors. Correctly uses APA formatting
General requirements:
Submissions should be typed, double-spaced, 1″ margins, times new roman 12 pt font, and saved as .doc, .docx, .pdf.
Use APA format for citations and references
View the grading rubric so you understand how you will be assessed on this Assignment.
Disclaimer- Originality of attachments will be verified by Turnitin. Both you and your instructor will receive the results.
This course has “Resubmission” status enabled to help you if you realized you submitted an incorrect or blank file, or if you need to submit multiple documents as part of your Assignment. Resubmission of an Assignment after it is graded, to attempt a better grade, is not permitted.
Work-Family Conflict Among Active-Duty Mothers in the Military
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25 January 2026
Over the past several decades, military institutions around the world have experienced a steady increase in the number of women serving in active-duty roles. As women’s participation has expanded, so too has scholarly attention to the challenges they face within organizations historically designed around male career patterns and limited caregiving responsibilities. One significant challenge confronting women in military service is the difficulty of balancing professional demands with family life, particularly for those who are mothers. Military service often requires long work hours, frequent relocations, deployments, and sustained operational readiness, all of which can create tension with family responsibilities and stability.
From a sociological standpoint, work–family conflict among women in military institutions reflects broader structural and cultural dynamics rather than isolated individual experiences. Military organizations operate through rigid hierarchies, standardized expectations, and norms that prioritize occupational commitment and availability, which may conflict with social expectations surrounding motherhood and caregiving. Sociological theories such as gendered organizations theory and role conflict theory provide useful frameworks for understanding how institutional structures and cultural norms shape these experiences.
This research proposal examines how military organizational structures and gendered cultural norms contribute to work–family conflict among active-duty mothers in military institutions and considers how institutional policies and support programs may help reduce these conflicts.
Background
Military institutions have undergone significant transformation over the past several decades as female participation in active-duty service has expanded across national contexts. As policies governing women’s service have evolved, research has increasingly demonstrated that military participation produces distinct social outcomes for women compared to their civilian counterparts. Gregory and Lindke (2024) find that female veterans across multiple service eras exhibit different marital patterns than civilian women, suggesting that military service shapes women’s life trajectories in meaningful and enduring ways. While these outcomes are not inherently positive or negative, they highlight the importance of examining how institutional participation influences women’s social experiences both during and after military service. As women continue to enlist at higher rates and are increasingly targeted in recruitment efforts, understanding how military service affects women has become a critical area of sociological inquiry with implications for military institutions and service members alike.
Military institutions are highly structured organizations characterized by hierarchical authority, strict rules, and expectations of discipline, availability, and collective commitment. Service members are often required to prioritize occupational demands over personal considerations, with long and unpredictable work hours, geographic mobility, and frequent periods of separation from family life treated as normal aspects of military service. These organizational expectations are reinforced through formal command structures as well as informal cultural norms that emphasize endurance, conformity, and loyalty to the mission. While such characteristics are central to military effectiveness, they also shape the conditions under which service members navigate their personal lives, particularly those with caregiving responsibilities.
From a sociological perspective, these organizational features are not neutral in their effects. Expectations of constant readiness and total commitment often align with ideal worker norms that assume the absence of competing family responsibilities. When combined with persistent gender norms that continue to associate caregiving and emotional labor primarily with women, these institutional expectations can create heightened strain for women in military service. As a result, women may experience ongoing tension between professional obligations and family roles, not due to individual shortcomings, but because organizational structures and cultural expectations are poorly aligned with the realities of caregiving and family life.
Sociological approaches to work and gender emphasize that organizations shape not only labor practices but also identity formation. Military institutions operate as gendered organizations in which professional norms have historically been aligned with masculine ideals, often creating tension for women seeking to integrate their gender and professional identities. Research examining women’s identity development in military contexts demonstrates that servicewomen frequently experience strain as they attempt to reconcile expectations of femininity with the demands of military professionalism. Drawing on a narrative study of a woman serving in a combat unit, Khraban (2024) illustrates how gender stereotypes and masculine organizational norms can create identity dissonance, prompting women to adopt coping strategies such as masking or modifying aspects of their gender identity. At the same time, the study highlights that women’s integration does not require the abandonment of femininity; rather, feminine traits may reshape professional norms in ways that enhance group cohesion and effectiveness. This theoretical perspective underscores how work–family and identity-related conflicts are produced through institutional structures and cultural expectations rather than individual shortcomings.
Reference
Gregory, C. C., & Lindke, C. (2024). I Am No Man: Impacts of Military Service for Female Veterans. Journal of Political & Military Sociology, 51(1), 28–65.
KHRABAN, T. (2024). Developing a Well-balanced Military Identity among Female Military Personnel. Polish Sociological Review, 225(1), 69–82.