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Alternative civilian service

Alternative civilian service, also called alternative services, civilian service, non-military service, and substitute service, is a form of national service performed in lieu of military conscription for various reasons, such as conscientious objection, inadequate health, or political reasons. Alternative service usually involves some kind of labor.

"Alternative service" redirects here. For the prayer book, see Alternative Service Book.

Definition[edit]

Alternative civilian service is service to a government made as a civilian, particularly such service as an option for conscripted persons who are conscientious objectors and object to military service.


Civilian service is usually performed in the service of non-profit governmental bodies or other institutions. For example, in Austria, men drafted for alternative civilian service mainly serve in healthcare facilities and retirement homes, while other countries have a wider variety of possible placements.


Alternative service is often rejected by antimilitarist conscientious objectors, who still regard it as part of the military system. Many argue that it is not inconveniencing the military in any way, and in fact paints them in a good light. Moreover, in the past non-military service has often freed up people for work in the military, or enabled people to return to the military e.g. nursing. Those conscientious objectors who also reject alternative service are known as absolutists or total objectors.

History and human rights[edit]

The Twenty Classes was a program used by the Turkish government during World War II to conscript the male non-Turkish minority population mainly consisting of Armenians, Greeks and Jews. The prevailing and widespread point of view on the matter was that, anticipating entry to World War II, Turkey gathered in advance all unreliable non-Turkish men regarded as a potential "fifth column".


Lack of alternative service in Armenia in 2003–2004 was considered to violate freedom of religion by the European Court of Human Rights in 2011.[1]

: Civilian Alternative Service since 1975

Austria

Cyprus

Estonia

: Siviilipalvelus established in 1931

Finland

Greece

: Sherut Leumi

Israel

: Alternatyvioji krašto apsaugos tarnyba

Lithuania

: Alternative Civilian Service (Russian: альтернативная гражданская служба)[2]

Russia

: Social Service Agent (Korean: 사회복무요원)

South Korea

: Swiss Civilian Service since 1992

Switzerland

Taiwan

instead of Zivildienst in Austria

Austrian Service Abroad

instead of mandatory civilian service Austria

European Voluntary Service

as a substitute to alternative civilian service in Austria

Voluntary ecological year

instead of the mandatory Zivildienst in Austria

Voluntary social year

Servizio Civile Universale instead of Servizio Civile Nazionale in Italy (2005–present day)

Unarmed service (vapenfri tjänst) as an alternative to the otherwise mandatory in Sweden

Värnplikt

: Zivildienst, 1961–2011

Germany

: Servizio civile, 1972–2005[3]

Italy

: Siviltjenesten, abolished in 2012

Norway

: Forestry service (Russia)

Russian Empire

Prestación Social Sustitutoría, 1985–2001

Spain

established in the United States during World War I

American Friends Service Committee

in the United Kingdom starting in 1939 and during World War II. Later abolished as the UK abolished military service.

International Voluntary Service

ancient form of forced non-military labor by government, similar to alternative civilian service

Corvée

Service Civil International