The History of Veterans' Policy in the United States: A Comparative Overview

IF 0.9 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Olivier Burtin
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

The United States is one of the foremost examples of a country that adopted an “exclusive” approach to veterans’ policy: namely, where welfare programs for veterans are treated separately from those covering the rest of the population. Ranging from free healthcare to old-age pension to civil service preference, former U.S. soldiers have access to a wide range of benefits administered by a single federal entity, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Though these programs are more varied and expensive than anywhere else in the world, their origin remains unexplored. This is not only because scholars of the welfare state have tended to focus on programs targeting traditionally marginalized groups, but also because scholars of veterans’ affairs rarely place their topic in the larger context of U.S. social policy. Both gaps stem from the prevailing assumption that veterans are one of the few privileged groups in American society whose benefits do not fall under the category of “welfare” but instead of earned rights. This paper bridges this divide by adopting a threefold approach: it places veterans’ benefits within the framework of the U.S. welfare state as a whole, it retraces their evolution from the colonial period to the Vietnam War, and it sets the US experience in comparative perspective. In doing so, it highlights a series of factors that reflected not only the specific nature of warfare in U.S. history—such as its frequency and intensity, but also its timing and the fact that it rarely caused major civilian casualties or economic destruction, which allowed veterans to claim that they alone bore war’s burden—but also of its political system—for instance, the country’s relative political stability and the fact that the early extension of white male suffrage allowed U.S. veterans to influence politics before their counterparts in other industrialized countries.
美国退伍军人政策的历史:比较综述
美国是对退伍军人政策采取“排他性”做法的最典型国家之一,即将退伍军人的福利项目与覆盖其他人口的福利项目分开对待。从免费医疗保健到养老金,再到公务员优先待遇,退伍军人可以享受由退伍军人事务部(VA)管理的各种福利。尽管这些项目比世界上其他任何地方都更加多样化和昂贵,但它们的起源仍未被探索。这不仅是因为研究福利国家的学者倾向于关注针对传统上被边缘化群体的项目,还因为研究退伍军人事务的学者很少把他们的话题放在美国社会政策的大背景下。这两种差距都源于一种普遍的假设,即退伍军人是美国社会中为数不多的特权群体之一,他们的福利不属于“福利”范畴,而是属于争取来的权利。本文通过采用三方面的方法来弥合这一分歧:它将退伍军人的福利置于美国福利国家的整体框架内,它追溯了退伍军人福利从殖民时期到越南战争的演变,并将美国的经验置于比较的角度。在这样做的过程中,它强调了一系列因素,这些因素不仅反映了美国历史上战争的特定性质,比如它的频率和强度,而且还反映了它的时间和它很少造成重大平民伤亡或经济破坏的事实,这使得退伍军人声称他们独自承担了战争的负担,而且还反映了它的政治制度,例如,这个国家的相对政治稳定,以及白人男性选举权的早期延伸,使得美国退伍军人先于其他工业化国家的同行影响政治。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
2.30
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