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Conscientious objector
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===Spain=== Conscientious objection was not permitted in [[Francoist Spain]].<ref>[[Peter Brock (historian)|Peter Brock]] and Nigel Young, ''Pacifism in the Twentieth Century''. Syracuse University Press, New York, 1999 {{ISBN|0-8156-8125-9}} (pp. 96–7, 311).</ref> Conscientious objectors usually refused to serve on religious grounds, such as being Jehovah's Witnesses, and were placed in prison for the duration of their sentences. The [[Spanish Constitution of 1978]] acknowledged conscientious objectors.<ref>[[s:Spanish Constitution of 1978/Part I#Division 2. Rights and Duties of Citizens|Spanish Constitution section 30.2]]</ref> The Spanish parliament established a longer service ({{Lang|es|Prestación Social Sustitutoria}}) as an alternative to the Army. In spite of this, a strong movement appeared that refused both services. The [[Red Cross]] was the only important organisation employing objectors. Because of this, the waiting lists for the PSS were long, especially in areas like [[Navarre]], where pacifism, [[Basque nationalism]] and a low unemployment rate discouraged young males from the army{{Original research inline|date=January 2011}}. Thousands of ''insumisos'' (non-submittants) publicly refused the PSS, and hundreds were imprisoned. In addition a number of those in the military decided to refuse further duties. A number of people not liable for military service made declarations of self-incrimination, stating that they had encouraged ''insumisión''.<ref name="Ordás-García 2022">{{cite journal |author-last=Ordás García |author-first=Carlos Ángel |date=May 2022 |title=The Antimilitarist Campaign against Compulsory Military Service in Spain during the 1970s and 1980s |journal=[[Contemporary European History]] |location=[[Cambridge]] and [[New York City|New York]] |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] |volume=31 |issue=3 |pages=286–304 |doi=10.1017/S0960777322000224 |s2cid=249051063 |issn=1469-2171}}</ref> The government, fearing popular reaction, reduced the length of service and instead of sentencing ''insumisos'' to prison declared them unfit for public service. Fronting the decreasing birth rate and the popular opposition to an army seen as a continuating institution of one of the pillars of the dictatorship's regime, the Spanish government tried to modernise the model carried from the [[Francisco Franco|Franco]] era, professionalizing it and thus bringing an end to conscription by the end of 2001. The new army tried to provide an education for civilian life and participated in peace operations in [[Bosnia and Herzegovina|Bosnia]]. {{See also|Insubordinate movement in Spain}}
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