不相称的Veteranship

Q1 Social Sciences Conflict and Society Pub Date : 2019-06-01 DOI:10.3167/arcs.2019.050108
E. V. Roekel, Valentina Salvi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在后独裁统治时期的阿根廷,参加过残酷镇压暴乱的退伍军人拥有极不一致的公民身份,时而侵犯时而尊重合法权利和福利。本文着眼于交替的过渡时期司法实践和不断变化的关于战争和责任的道德话语如何使阿根廷这些退伍军人获得权利、资源和权利的途径极不稳定。阿根廷最近转向对反人类罪的惩罚,从法律上巩固了他们的道德沦丧。直到20世纪80年代初,这些被定罪的军官都是不可接触的模范军官,他们已经两次被国家和军事机构降职。基于对被定罪的军官及其亲属的长期田野调查,本文追溯了道德和法律实践之间的偶然关系,这种关系构成了这些退伍军人成为退伍军人的波动过程的双重垮台。就此而言,他们的退伍军人身份取决于高度冲突和变革的社会政治进程,这些进程涉及退伍军人的法律权利、权利和价值等更广泛的道德倾向。
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Unbecoming Veteranship
In post-authoritarian Argentina, veterans who participated in the brutal counterinsurgency of the last dictatorship (1976–1983) inhabit an extremely inconsistent citizenship, alternatively violating and respecting legal rights and entitlements. This article looks at how alternating transitional justice practices and the ever-changing moral discourses about warfare and accountability create highly unstable access to rights, resources, and entitlements for these veterans in Argentina. Th e recent shift toward retribution for crimes against humanity in Argentina has legally consolidated their moral downfall. From being untouchable and exemplary officers until the early 1980s, the now convicted military officers have been demoted twice by the state and the military institution. Based on long-term fieldwork with the convicted officers and their kin, this article traces the contingent relation between the moral and legal practices that underlie this double downfall that constitutes a fluctuating process of un/becoming veteranship for these veterans. Their veteranship, for that matter, depends on highly conflictive and transformative sociopolitical processes that speak to broader moral dispositions surrounding legal rights, entitlements, and worthiness for veterans.
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来源期刊
Conflict and Society
Conflict and Society Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
12 weeks
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