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dominated societal institution,” has had an important role in the development of the nursing<br />

profession. 6 Yet nursing education in military structures in Turkey was not systematized until 1972.<br />

Since then, systematic nursing education at different levels has been provided by five different<br />

institutions, established one after another to meet the nursing demands of military hospitals, and all<br />

of which have functioned in affiliation with the Gülhane Military Academy of Medicine in Ankara, the<br />

capital of the modern Turkish Republic and one of the primary targets of rural migrants. Despite<br />

offering different levels of education, all of these military nursing schools have provided hospitalbased<br />

training and were long supposed to have provided relatively more modern, disciplined, and<br />

qualified education.<br />

Nursing emerged in the nineteenth century under war conditions as an “anonymous and<br />

altruistic” public service job requiring the dedication and commitment of women. 7 Yet Jane Schultz<br />

claims that nursing has usually been downplayed or ignored by military historians “because of<br />

women’s institutional invisibility (women were non‐combatants and volunteers, so few official<br />

records document their travel in military circles) and because of a perception that only men make,<br />

fight, and matter in wars.” 8<br />

Although historians acknowledge the benevolence that nurses perform in the<br />

fulfilment of their medical duties, they are beginning to understand that the extension of<br />

medical care occurs within a political, social, and cultural context that gives it meaning.<br />

Nurses heal, certainly, but they do so as agents of nations, militaries, and organizations<br />

that extend services as part of a larger political ideology. 9<br />

Nurses, “the majority of whom are women, are the largest single force” in the health care system,<br />

but they “do not have control within the system; rather they are controlled by it.” 10 Although nursing<br />

practices comprise an indispensable part of health care and healing, nurses interviewed for this<br />

research reported clear dissatisfaction with their position in hospitals. There are several reasons for<br />

this, including inter‐ and intra‐professional hierarchies based on educational, patriarchal, medical,<br />

and military regulations that affect bureaucratic‐administrative structures, all of which intertwine to<br />

influence the destiny of nursing, still characterized as a “quasi‐professional job.” The number of<br />

nurses, including midwives, in public service in Turkey today is estimated to be around 150,000.<br />

Nurses comprise a rather large workforce, yet they face the problem of visibility – for some, even in<br />

their work environments – and have almost no representation in the political and social arena, and<br />

there are chronic problems related to their education, social status, and employment. Despite their<br />

huge number, nurses do not have much influence over their working conditions which are mostly<br />

determined from the top, by political or medical authorities.<br />

As in many parts of the world, nurses in Turkey have had diverse educational backgrounds. Until<br />

the 1970s, it was unexceptional for a woman to take a few months’ training in order to become a<br />

nurse. Aside from several short‐term courses organized prior to the 1970s, various institutions<br />

provided secondary school or high school nursing diplomas. Since 1955 there has also been<br />

university‐level nursing education which offers two‐year associate degree and four‐year bachelor’s<br />

degree programs. The Gülhane Academy also educated and employed high‐ranking army officers as<br />

nurses. During my fieldwork, I did not meet any still‐employed nurses who got their diploma through<br />

limited‐period nursing courses, but it was possible to find women of different generations who had<br />

been trained at all different levels of schools, both military and non‐military, working in various<br />

nursing positions.<br />

Instability in nursing education – the varying levels of education offered by different institutions –<br />

seems to have paved the way for irreparable consequences in terms of segmentation and<br />

stratification within the profession. Status conflicts based on educational hierarchy, together with<br />

age hierarchy – which is associated with generational conflict – in both military and non‐military<br />

hospitals have long been one of the prominent problems that nurses have to deal with. It seems that<br />

each new generation believes itself to be better equipped with more modern educational<br />

perspectives and claims superiority over others who were trained earlier or in other schools. Nurses<br />

898

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