Anti-Conscriptionism in Australia: Individuals, Organisations and Arguments
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Bongiorno, Frank
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Monash University Publishing
Abstract
This chapter explores key individuals and organisations involved in the fight against conscription, and the arguments that they deployed against the proposal. In the end, in a secret ballot system, any conclusions about
why people voted the way they did in the plebiscites on conscription held in October 1916 and December 1917 will necessarily be tentative. Leslie C. Jauncey, one of the earliest historians of conscription in Australia, remarked
that '[e]xcept in working-class circles there was a tendency for opponents of compulsion to keep their peace'. But active anti-conscriptionists did talk incessantly about freedom; and, in a society where British culture provided so many of the resources of political discourse, it seems plausible that appeals to British liberty had a resonance among 'silent' voters wary of handing over
to government greater power over the lives of its citizenry than the state already possessed.
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The Conscription Conflict and the Great War
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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