Uniform

A variety of uniforms used in the Canadian Militia, 1898.

A uniform is a type of clothing worn by members of an organization while participating in that organization's activity. Modern uniforms are most often worn by armed forces and paramilitary organizations such as police, emergency services, security guards, in some workplaces and schools and by inmates in prisons. In some countries, some other officials also wear uniforms in their duties; such is the case of the Commissioned Corps of the United States Public Health Service or the French prefects. For some organizations, such as police, it may be illegal for non members to wear the uniform.

Etymology

From the Latin unus, one, and forma, form.[1]

Service and work uniforms

Uniformed newspaper vendors in Mexico City. Some work places require their employees to wear a uniform.

Workers sometimes wear uniforms or corporate clothing of one nature or another. Workers required to wear a uniform include retail workers, bank and post office workers, public security and health care workers, blue collar employees, personal trainers in health clubs, instructors in summer camps, lifeguards, janitors, public transit employees, towing and truck drivers, airline employees and holiday operators, and bar, restaurant and hotel employees. The use of uniforms by these organizations is often an effort in branding and developing a standard corporate image but also has important effects on the employees required to wear the uniform.

The term uniform may be misleading because employees are not always fully uniform in appearance and may not always wear attire provided by the organization, while still representing the organization in their attire. Academic work on organizational dress by Rafaeli & Pratt (1993) referred to uniformity (homogeneity) of dress as one dimension, and conspicuousness as a second.[2] Employees all wearing black, for example, may appear conspicuous and thus represent the organization even though their attire is uniform only in the color of their appearance, not in its features. Pratt & Rafaeli, (1997) described struggles between employees and management about organizational dress as struggles about deeper meanings and identities that dress represents.[3] And Pratt & Rafaeli (2001) described dress as one of the larger set of symbols and artifacts in organizations which coalesce into a communication grammar.[4]

Educational

Students taking a class photo in uniform. Students in many countries are required to wear school uniforms.

Uniforms are required in many schools. School uniforms vary from a standard issue T-shirt to rigorous requirements for many items of formal wear at private schools. School uniforms are in place in many public schools as well.

Countries with mandatory school uniforms include Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Thailand, India, Australia, U.A.E, Singapore, Philippines, some schools in Taiwan, New Zealand, South Africa, Indonesia and the United Kingdom, among as many other places. In some countries, uniform types vary from school to school, but in the United Kingdom, many pupils between 11 and 16 of age wear a formal jacket, tie and trousers for boys and blouse, tie and trousers, skirt, or culottes for girls. The ties will have a set pattern or a logo embroidered for the school, and jackets will usually carry a badge on the breast pocket with the school's name, coat of arms, and motto or emblem. Jackets are being replaced in many schools by sweatshirts bearing the school badge. Children in many United Kingdom state primary schools will have a uniform jumper and/or polo shirt with the school name and logo.

Diplomats

From about 1800 to after the Second World War, diplomats from most countries (and often senior non-military officials generally) wore official uniforms at public occasions. Such uniforms are now retained by only a few diplomatic services, and are seldom worn.

Prison

Prisoners in Utah (c. 1885) wearing striped prison uniforms. Prison often require inmates to wear uniforms.

A prison uniform is any uniform worn by individuals incarcerated in a prison, jail or similar facility of detention.

Sports

Most, if not all, sports teams also wear uniforms, made in the team's distinctive colors. In individual sports like tennis and golf, players may choose any clothing design allowed by the competition rules.

To prevent the confusion (for officials, players, and fans) that might result from two opposing teams wearing uniforms (kits) with similar colors, teams have different variations for "home" and "away" games, where typically one is dark and the other is light. In the four major North American sports leagues, one of the two uniforms is almost always predominantly white, and each league has a rule to determine which team should normally wear its white uniform. Customarily, National Football League (NFL) and National Hockey League (NHL) teams wear their color uniforms for home games. By contrast, Major League Baseball (MLB) and National Basketball Association (NBA) teams wear their white uniforms for home games. These rules are not strictly enforced, however, for any of the four major professional sports leagues in North America. Some NFL teams, most notably the Dallas Cowboys, prefer to wear their white jerseys for home games. When Joe Gibbs was the head coach of the Washington Redskins first from 1981-1992, and again from 2004-2007 the Redskins exclusively wore white jerseys at home games.[5] In the United Kingdom, especially in football, the terms "kit" or "strip" (as in 'football kit') are more common (instead of uniform).

Security and armed forces

A Russian honor guard wearing their full dress uniforms. Full dress is a formal uniform typically worn in ceremonies.

Military uniform is the standardised dress worn by members of the armed forces and paramilitaries of various nations. Military dress and military styles have gone through great changes over the centuries from colourful and elaborate to extremely utilitarian. Military uniforms in the form of standardised and distinctive dress, intended for identification and display, are typically a sign of organised military forces equipped by a central authority. The utilitarian necessities of war and economic frugality are now the dominant factors in uniform design. Most military forces, however, have developed several different uniform types.

Military personnel in most armies and some civilian officials may wear some or all of the following:

  • battledress: khakis or other drab coloured working dress. Increasingly superseded by camouflage clothing for field wear, outdoor work and even office wear;
  • service dress: formerly active-service and ordinary duty wear. Now worn for semi-formal occasions often with abbreviated forms of embellishment (such as using duller buttons or replacing medals with ribbon bars). Equivalent of the civilian lounge suit.
  • dress uniform: worn at ceremonies, official receptions, and other special occasions; medals are typically worn.
  • full dress uniform: special parade or ceremonial dress, often of colorful materials and traditional cut. Modern usage generally restricted to limited categories of personnel such as ceremonial guards, military bands or military academy cadets.
  • mess dress, formal evening dress worn in the mess or at other formal occasions after about 6pm. Equivalent of civilian black tie. Usually worn with miniaturized medals.

The practice of wearing a form of dress uniform off duty ("walking out dress") has now largely died out as modern soldiers often prefer the casual clothing of their civilian peers.

Police

A uniformed police officer in Sweden. The police often wear uniforms to distinguish themselves in public.

Members of the police in every country have a uniform for identification as law-enforcement personnel or agents. They are distinguished from the public by the uniform the police wear during overt policing activity. Usually each country has its own different police uniform.

Contrast plainclothes law enforcement and undercover operations.

Medical workers

Uniforms can distinguish various categories of staff in medical institutions: doctors, surgeons, nurses, ancillary staff and volunteers.

Note that traditional female nurses' uniforms resemble uniforms (habits) worn by religious orders.[6][7]

Equipment - notably stethoscopes - worn like a badge of office, may accompany or replace medical uniforms.

Domestic workers

Domestic workers are often required by their employers-managers to wear a uniform.

Beautician

The beauticians use uniforms to protect their skin from harmful chemicals and acid. These chemical resistant and water proof uniforms not only safe to work in but also provide a professional, polished appearance throughout the day.

Scouting

Statue of a Boy Scout in uniform. The Scout uniform is a specific characteristic of scouting used in most of their events.

The Scout uniform is a specific characteristic of the Scouting movement, in the words of Baden-Powell at the 1937 World Jamboree, "it covers the differences of country and race and make all feel that they are members one with another of one World Brotherhood". The original uniform, which has created a familiar image in the public eye, consisted of a khaki button-up shirt, shorts and a broad-brimmed campaign hat. Baden-Powell himself wore shorts since being dressed like the youth contributed to reducing perceived "distance" between the adult and the young person. Nowadays, uniforms are frequently blue, orange, red, or green, and shorts are replaced by long pants in areas where the culture calls for modesty, and in winter weather. The campaign hats have also been dropped in some Scouting organisations.

Buttons

Some uniforms have specially-manufactured buttons, which, in the case of antiques, often outlast the fabric components of the uniform, and become highly collectable items.[8] Nowadays, buttons come in different materials, shapes sizes and colors.

Hygiene

In some countries or regions such as the UK, Australia or Hong Kong, the cost of cleaning one's uniform or work clothing can be partially deducted or rebated from the personal income tax, if the organization for which the person works does not have a laundry department or an outsourced commercial laundry.[9][10]

See also

References

  1. Wikisource Atkinson, Charles Francis (1911). "Uniforms". In Chisholm, Hugh. Encyclopædia Britannica. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 582.
  2. Rafaeli, A. & Pratt, M. J. 1993. Tailored meaning: On the meaning and impact of organizational dress. Academy of Management Review, 18(1): pp. 32-55.
  3. Pratt, M. & Rafaeli, A. 1997. Organizational dress as a symbol of multilayered social identities. Academy of Management Journal, 40(4): pp. 862-898.
  4. Pratt, M. & Rafaeli, A. 2001. Symbols as a language of organizational relationships. Research in Organizational Behavior, 23: 93-113.
  5. "White at Home in the NFL". www.uni-watch.com. Retrieved July 5, 2015.
  6. Compare: Finkelman, Anita Ward; Kenner, Carole (2010). Professional Nursing Concepts: Competencies for Quality Leadership. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. ISBN 9781449617677. Retrieved 2016-11-08. Prior to the all-white uniform, the nurse's uniform was gray or blue, similar to a nun's habit and to the uniforms worn during Florence Nightingale's time [...].
  7. Hardy, Susan and Corones, Anthony, "The Nurse’s Uniform as Ethopoietic Fashion", Fashion Theory, Vol.21, No.5. (2015), pp. 523-552. doi=10.1080/1362704X.2016.1203090
  8. Peach State Button Club (2010). "Uniform (Division II)". Button Country. Georgia, USA: buttoncountry.com. Retrieved 11 March 2010.
  9. HM Revenue & Customs. "SE67240 - Tax treatment of nurses: expenses deductions - laundering uniforms - amount to be deducted". Retrieved 1 November 2007.
  10. Australian Taxation Office. "Claiming a deduction for laundry/dry cleaning of work clothing". Archived from the original on 27 February 2008. Retrieved 1 November 2007.
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