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conscription

/kənˈskrɪpʃən/
/kənˈskrɪpʃən/
IPA guide

Other forms: conscriptions

When a military needs people to fight in a war, but there aren’t enough volunteers, sometimes they'll begin conscription, which is a law that says if you are able to fight, you have to fight.

Also called the draft, conscription legally requires people to join the army, with penalties if they don’t. During the Vietnam War, many U.S. citizens protested conscription by burning their draft documents or fleeing to Canada, and some faced prison time because of these actions. The Latin roots of conscription translate to “write down together,” which is a much nicer way of saying “Go to war or go to jail.”

Definitions of conscription
  1. noun
    compulsory military service
    see moresee less
    types:
    levy, levy en masse
    the act of drafting into military service
    type of:
    militarisation, militarization, mobilisation, mobilization
    act of assembling and putting into readiness for war or other emergency: "mobilization of the troops"
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