美国兵役和LGBT政策

M. Reilly, E. Hillman, Elliot Koltnow
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究美国军事政策的演变,揭示了关于女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋和变性人(LGBT)的权利和机会的辩论是如何被军事人事政策、联邦法律和军事单位内的文化习俗所塑造的。LGBT人群通过监管制度经历了美国军事服务,经常把他们定义为繁重的偏差者,并否认他们服务的其他成员所享有的公民权利。无论是公开的还是不公开的,LGBT人群都曾是志愿者或应征入伍者。美国军史上LGBT服役的关键时期包括第二次世界大战、冷战和越南战争时期、“不问不说”(DADT)制度(1994-2010)和后DADT时期(2011年及以后)。在这段时间里,军队和美国重新评估了对LGBT服役人员的规定,并实施了影响LGBT军人和潜在新兵的权利、机会和安全的改革。这些变化沿着一条从完全排斥LGBT人士公开服役到豁免的道路发展,在这种豁免下,LGBT人士可以在某些条件下服役,这些条件通常包括驱逐、惩罚和法外暴力的威胁。在后dadt时期,通过法律、军事法规和训练的变化,一些(但不是全部)LGBT群体的包容或公开服务变得合法和安全,以防止某些类型的性别认同和性取向歧视。由于公开服兵役是美国完全公民身份的标志,也是获得经济安全的一种手段,因此消除对LGBT服兵役的限制长期以来一直是民权倡导者关注的焦点。服兵役一直被视为证明公民的忠诚和爱国主义,以及提供物质和社会进步。由于暴力和社会排斥,许多LGBT人群面临着更大的失业、无家可归和过早死亡的风险,因此服兵役是他们在政治和经济上取得进步的一个特别重要的机会。尊重这段历史并确定现有趋势有助于美国、其他国家和国际组织调整其政策,承认性别和性多样性。即使被正式政策排除在外,人们也找到了服务的方法,有时冒着巨大的个人风险。虽然他们的劳动被官方称赞为一种资产,但他们的贡献和需求并没有得到他们承诺为之服务的国家的充分认可和赞赏。作为美国最大的雇主和结构资源提供者,美国军方对LGBT军人和退伍军人的支持对仍然弱势的LGBT群体的社会公平至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
U.S. Military Service and LGBT Policy
Examining the evolution of U.S military policy reveals how debates about the rights and opportunities of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people have been shaped by military personnel policies, federal laws, and cultural practices within military units. LGBT individuals have experienced U.S. military service through regulatory regimes that have often defined them as burdensome deviants and denied them civil rights enjoyed by other service members. LGBT people have served as volunteers and conscripts, openly and in the closet. Key periods of U.S. military history for LGBT service include World War II, the Cold War, as well as the Vietnam War era, the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” (DADT) regime (1994–2010), and the post-DADT period (2011 and beyond). During these periods of time, the armed forces and the United States reassessed the regulation of the service of LGBT service members and implemented changes that affected the rights, opportunities, and safety of LGBT military personnel and potential recruits. Those changes traced a path from outright exclusion of open service by LGBT persons to exemption, under which LGBT persons may serve under certain conditions, which often included the threat of expulsion, punishment, and extra-legal violence. In the post-DADT period, inclusion, or open service by some, but not all, LGBT groups, was made legal and safer through changes in law and military regulations and training that protected against some types of gender-identity and sexual orientation discrimination. Because serving openly in the military is a sign of full citizenship in the United States as well as a means of achieving economic security, eliminating limits on LGBT military service has long been a focus of advocates for civil rights. Military service has been perceived as proving a citizen’s loyalty and patriotism as well as offering material and social advancement. With many LGBT people at greater risk of unemployment, homelessness, and premature death as a result of violence and social ostracism, military service has been an especially critical opportunity for political and economic advancement. Honoring this history and identifying existing trends can help the United States, other nations, and international organizations to adapt their policies in recognition of gender and sexual diversity. Even when excluded by formal policy, people have found ways to serve, sometimes at great personal risk. Although their labor is officially lauded as an asset, their contributions and needs have not been fully recognized or appreciated by the state they pledged to serve. As the nation’s largest employer and provider of structural resources, the U.S. military’s support of LGBT military personnel and veterans matters greatly to social equity for a still-vulnerable LGBT population.
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