Starting up a Project to Counter Military Recruiting
Ideas and resources for starting a local counter-recruitment project.
Print size: 8½ x 11 (double-sided)
Ideas and resources for starting a local counter-recruitment project.
Print size: 8½ x 11 (double-sided)
Ideas for high school students who want to oppose recruiting.
Report on Project YANO’s efforts to gain access to schools in San Diego County from 1984 to 1995 (updated 7/06). Discusses outreach strategies, legal basis for equal access, lessons learned by activists. Key correspondence with school districts is included in appendix. Very useful for getting a school outreach program started.
Print size: 8½ x 11
Pages: 48, offset for hole punch
“JROTC is one of the best recruiting devices that we could have.”
—William Cohen, then Secretary of Defense, February 2000
List of employment training and placement programs for youths in San Diego County.
Print Size: 8½ x 11 (PDF)
List of possible sources for college financial aid, including national sources and some specific to California.
Latest revision: Sep 2024
Straight talk from soldiers, veterans and their family members tells what is missing from the sales pitches presented by recruiters and the military's marketing efforts.
Rick Jahnkow of Project YANO speaks to counter-recruitment organizers at "Its Our World - Change It" - the National Counter-Recruitment & De-Militarization Conference held in Chicago from July 17-19, 2009.
Leaders from the Project on Youth and Non-Military Opportunities present career choices in peacemaking and social change to high school and college students gathered at UC San Diego. UCSD TV Series: "Growing Activism" [3/2008]
Questions to ask counselors to learn about military aptitude testing at a school; helpful in preparing a campaign against the ASVAB.
Print size: 8½ x 11 (double-sided)
1999 Memo from U.S. Army Cadet Command ordering JROTC teachers to help the military recruit students into the Army. Documents the way JROTC has been used as a recruiting tool.
Print size: 8½ x 11
The military-sponsored Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps program teaches its lessons to over 550,000 students in classrooms at approximately 3,400 high schools around the country (“Geographic and Demographic Representativeness of Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps,” Rand Corporation, 2017).
This Guide contains information on steps that can be taken to remove JROTC shooting ranges and marksmanship training from high schools. The content is based on decades of research and extensive experience organizing around the JROTC issue, including a campaign that succeeded in a highly militarized community. Samples of materials used in that campaign are at the end of the Guide.
Uses personnel budget from one school to illustrate how JROTC can cost more than other educational programs.
Explains how JROTC subsidy is calculated and why it becomes an added expense for schools.
Print size: 8½ x 11