A Nation of Veterans examines how the United States created the world's most generous system of veterans' benefits and shows how veterans formed a social movement to obtain and then defend their advantages against criticism from liberals and conservatives alike.
A Nation of Veterans examines how the United States created the world's most generous system of veterans' benefits and shows how veterans formed a social movement to obtain and then defend their advantages against criticism from liberals and conservatives alike.
A Nation of Veterans examines how the United States created the world's most generous system of veterans' benefits. Though we often see former service members as an especially deserving group, the book shows that veterans had to wage a fierce political battle to obtain and then defend their advantages against criticism from liberals and conservatives alike. They succeeded in securing their privileged status in public policy only by rallying behind powerful interest groups, including the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Disabled American Veterans, and the American Legion. In the process, veterans formed one of the most powerful movements of the early and mid-twentieth century, though one that we still know comparatively little about.
In examining how the veterans' movement inscribed martial citizenship onto American law, politics, and culture, A Nation of Veterans offers a new history of the U.S. welfare state that highlights its longstanding connection with warfare. It shows how a predominantly white and male group such as military veterans was at the center of social policy debates in the interwar and postwar period and how women and veterans of color were often discriminated against or denied access to their benefits. It moves beyond the traditional focus on the 1944 G.I. Bill to examine other important benefits like pensions, civil service preference, and hospitals. The book also examines multiple generations of veterans, by shedding light on how former service members from both world wars as well as Korea and the Cold War interacted with each other.
This more complete picture of veterans' politics helps us understand the deep roots of the military welfare state in the United States today.
Winner of Winner of the Richard E. Neustadt Book Prize, granted by the American Politics Group of the UK Political Studies Association 2023 (United States) Winner of Selected by Choice magazine as an Outstanding Academic Title 2023 (United States)
“Why does the United States have a separate--and more generous--welfare system for military veterans? Why are veterans' benefits widely understood as the nation's payment of a 'sacred and inviolable debt'? In this carefully researched and clearly argued work, Olivier Burtin offers an historical answer, one grounded (as good histories so often are) in contingency and in conflict. A Nation of Veterans is essential reading for anyone interested in American social policy or civil-military relations in the United States.”
"A Nation of Veterans offers unique close look at institutions and actors at the heart of important transformations in midcentury America, it gives attention to a major social movement which has been eclipsed only by its own success, and it offers a perspective on too-forgotten history of the politics of defense spending (broadly defined) and civil-military relations clearly relevant for their contrast to debates today that they largely shaped. In all, this work goes a long way in replacing myth with history about veterans in American society and the construction of the welfare state." (IdeAs) "
A Nation of Veterans is an important contribution not just to policy history or the history of social movements
but also to the understanding of the importance and conflicted nature of America's relationship with its
veterans...Burtin has shown that easy understandings of military service, patriotism, and American politics are
not sufficient to truly explain the importance of the veteran to American politics and culture.
Olivier Burtin is Associate Professor of U.S. History and Civilization at the University of Amiens, France.
This item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.