Development of foreign language capability as a valued human resource asset within the military : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for Master of Business Studies in Human Resource Management at Massey University, Palmerston North
Loading...

Date
2012
DOI
Open Access Location
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Massey University
Rights
The Author
Abstract
English has held the status as a global language for many years, and has been the
language in which the corporate and military sectors conduct their international
operations. However, due to globalisation, technological advances and challenging
economic times, the environments in which businesses and defence forces operate
have evolved considerably. Defence forces are increasingly involved in nontraditional
operations, in non-traditional geographical locations, working alongside
non-traditional international security partners. In light of the changing role and
expectations of the military, Conway (2005) suggests that the military sector has
been guilty for too long of assuming that English, the traditional language of
international diplomacy, politics, economics and military operations, will remain the
prevalent language. While the corporate sector has recognised foreign language
capability as a human resource asset, its importance and operational relevance is
largely unacknowledged within the military sector.
The aim of this study was to examine how modern English speaking defence forces,
such as the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF), are addressing the issue of
„linguistic complacency‟ (Crystal, 2003), and what plans are in place to develop
human resources as foreign language capable assets. For the NZDF, the concept is
new. Consequently, a preliminary investigation into one of the single Services, the
Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN), was undertaken. It identified Mandarin Chinese,
French, Hindi and Japanese as the foreign languages of greatest applicability to the
Service. Census survey results of RNZN uniformed personnel indicated that over
half of respondents had some second-language ability (of varying proficiency level)
across more than forty languages. Despite the reported foreign language capacity,
the results, when compared with the Service‟s desired skills sets, suggested that
there are a number of gaps between the ideal and current capability requirements. A
United States Department of Defense model for developing foreign-language
capability was discussed as a blueprint for how the RNZN and NZDF could look to
bridge these gaps through the strengthening of educational ties with defence
partners.
Description
Keywords
New Zealand Defence Force, Personnel management, Foreign language capability, Bilingualism, Foreign language skills, Human resource assets