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Learn about the history, role, and structure of the Army HRC, a direct reporting unit that manages the career of Soldiers from basic training to retirement. The HRC is located on Fort Knox, Kentucky, and has 40 operational elements across the country.
Learn about the history, role, and functions of the Adjutant General's Corps, a branch of the U.S. Army established in 1775. The Corps provides personnel service support, manages the force, and coordinates human resources services for the Army.
Learn about the history, mission, and training of the Adjutant General School, which provides human resources and music support to the Army. The school is located at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, and offers courses for officers, enlisted, and civilians in various specialties.
As the largest enterprise resource planning program ever implemented for human resources, DIMHRS (pronounced dime-ers) was to subsume or replace over 90 legacy systems. The first phase of DIMHRS was expected to roll out first to the U.S. Army in 2009 and bring all payroll and personnel functions for the Army into one integrated web-based system.
The Soldier Support Institute is a U.S. Army organization that trains and educates soldiers and civilians in various support fields. It consists of three major schools: Adjutant General, Financial Management, and Recruiting and Retention.
CAPE is the Army Center for the Army Profession and Ethic, formerly known as ACPME. It is the proponent for the Army Profession, the Army Ethic and Character Development, and provides doctrine, training, and education to reinforce trust within the profession and with the American people.
During the 1980s, HEL focused much of its resources on the Army's Manpower and Personnel Integration (MANPRINT) initiative. As the lead AMC agency for human factors engineering in MANPRINT, HEL developed new policies and tools to address issues related to systems safety, manpower, training, and health hazards in material development programs.
This web page provides a partial list of agencies, field activities, and other components under the United States Department of Defense (DoD), which controls the Armed Forces of the United States. It also includes the names and functions of the major commands, the combatant commands, and the unified combatant commands of the DoD.