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Glossary›Conscientious Objection

Glossary

Conscientious Objection

The refusal to participate in military service or warfare based on deeply held moral, religious, or ethical beliefs that prohibit the taking of human life.

What is Conscientious Objection?

Conscientious objection is the principled refusal to perform military service, bear arms, or participate in warfare due to fundamental moral, religious, philosophical, or ethical convictions. A conscientious objector (CO) asserts that their deeply held beliefs—whether rooted in religious doctrine, humanistic philosophy, or personal moral reasoning—preclude them from engaging in acts that may result in killing or supporting military violence. The objection is “conscientious” because it arises from conscience: an internal moral compass that the individual regards as inviolable, even when it conflicts with legal obligations or state demands.

Conscientious objection may take several forms. Absolute objection rejects all participation in military activities, including non-combatant roles. Selective objection opposes specific wars or military actions deemed unjust, though many legal systems do not recognize this distinction. Some objectors accept alternative civilian service—working in hospitals, conservation, or social welfare—while others refuse any cooperation with military infrastructure.

The concept presumes a tension between individual moral autonomy and collective duty to the state, raising questions about the limits of governmental authority over conscience and the conditions under which citizens may legitimately disobey law.

Origins & Lineage

Conscientious objection has roots in multiple religious and philosophical traditions. Early Christians in the Roman Empire frequently refused military service, citing Jesus’s teachings on nonviolence and the commandment against killing. The theologian Tertullian (c. 160–220 CE) argued that Christ’s disarmament of Peter in the Garden of Gethsemane “disarmed every soldier thereafter.” Following Christianity’s establishment as Rome’s state religion in the 4th century, however, just war theory emerged to reconcile Christian participation in state violence.

The Historic Peace Churches—Mennonites, Quakers (Religious Society of Friends), and Church of the Brethren—formalized theological opposition to war from the 16th and 17th centuries onward. Quaker founder George Fox refused a military commission in 1651, and the tradition of “bearing witness” against war became central to Quaker identity. Mennonites, following the Anabaptist tradition, maintained strict separation from state violence, often facing persecution and migration as a result.

Modern legal recognition emerged gradually. The British Military Service Act of 1916, passed during World War I, established formal CO status, though objectors faced tribunals and many were imprisoned. In the United States, the Selective Service Act of 1917 recognized objection only for members of recognized peace churches. The scope broadened after World War II: the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and subsequent international instruments acknowledged freedom of conscience, though without explicit CO provisions.

Philosophical objection—grounded in secular humanism, anarchism, or political conscience rather than religion—gained recognition in many nations during the Vietnam War era. In 1971, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Gillette v. United States that selective objection to particular wars was not protected, while also affirming in Welsh v. United States (1970) that deeply held moral or ethical beliefs could substitute for traditional religious convictions.

How It’s Practiced

Conscientious objection manifests as both legal process and lived witness. In countries with conscription, potential objectors must typically apply for CO status, documenting the sincerity and depth of their beliefs through written statements, interviews, or tribunal appearances. Applicants describe formative experiences, religious or philosophical influences, and the specific ways their conscience prohibits military participation.

Approved objectors may perform alternative civilian service—often 1.5 times the length of military service—in healthcare, elder care, environmental conservation, or education. In Germany, Zivildienstleistende served in hospitals and social institutions until conscription ended in 2011. In Israel, pacifist objectors have been repeatedly imprisoned for refusal, as the state recognizes only religious exemptions for ultra-Orthodox Jews.

Beyond legal frameworks, conscientious objection is practiced through public witness: war tax resistance (refusing to pay the portion of taxes funding military operations), draft card burning, and sanctuary support for military resisters. Veterans who develop conscientious objection after enlistment—often following combat deployment—face distinct challenges, as most military systems do not recognize post-enlistment objection. Organizations like the Center on Conscience & War and War Resisters International provide counseling, legal support, and community.

Conscientious Objection Today

Conscientious objection remains legally recognized in most European democracies, though conscription itself has declined. Countries maintaining active conscription—South Korea, Israel, Finland, Austria—continue to process CO applications, with varying degrees of acceptance. South Korea imprisons approximately 600 objectors annually, predominantly Jehovah’s Witnesses, though a 2018 Constitutional Court ruling mandated alternative service options.

In the United States, the all-volunteer military structure has reduced CO applications, but military personnel may still apply for discharge based on conscientious objection acquired during service. The process requires demonstrating that beliefs crystallized after enlistment and are uniformly held against all war.

Contemporary objection has expanded beyond traditional warfare to include drone operation, cyber warfare, and weapons manufacturing. Employees at tech companies have organized against contracts with military and immigration enforcement agencies, invoking conscience-based refusal in the workplace.

Common Misconceptions

Conscientious objection is not cowardice or draft evasion undertaken to avoid danger. Historically, objectors faced imprisonment, social ostracism, and violence; many served in hazardous non-combatant roles such as medics or mine clearance. Desmond Doss, a Seventh-day Adventist CO who served as a combat medic in World War II, received the Medal of Honor for rescuing 75 wounded soldiers at Okinawa without carrying a weapon.

It is not necessarily pacifism. While many objectors hold pacifist beliefs, others object to specific wars they deem unjust or illegal without rejecting all possible use of force. Most legal systems do not accommodate this distinction.

It is not primarily political. Though objection may align with anti-war movements, legal CO status requires demonstrating beliefs grounded in moral or religious conscience, not pragmatic political disagreement with policy. The boundary between political and conscientious objection remains contested.

How to Begin

Prospective objectors should document their beliefs, influences, and moral development in writing, even before formal application becomes necessary. The Center on Conscience & War (centeronconscience.org) offers counseling and publishes detailed guides for military and draft-age objectors. The handbook “Advice for Conscientious Objectors in the Armed Forces” provides practical guidance for service members.

Key texts include Peter Brock’s “Pacifism in the United States” and “Freedom from War,” which chronicle the CO tradition; Plough Publishing’s “A Persistent Voice: Merton, Berrigan, and the Prophetic Tradition” examines Catholic objection; and the American Friends Service Committee archives document Quaker war witness.

For those exploring conscience and state authority philosophically, Henry David Thoreau’s “Civil Disobedience” and Michael Walzer’s “Obligations: Essays on Disobedience, War, and Citizenship” provide foundational analysis. Local Quaker meetings, Mennonite churches, and interfaith peace fellowships offer communities that honor conscientious discernment.

Related terms

ahimsapacifismcivil disobediencenonviolencejust war theoryquaker silence
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