Military recruitment & service

We look at the following issues:

  • Young people are not adequately supported to make an informed choice about enlistment, and a sanitised or glamourised view of military life and warfare is promoted.
  • The armed forces target recruitment activities at children, and are involved in education and youth organisations.
  • Military environments are not suited to recruits under the age of 18, and the armed forces do not accept full duty of care obligations.
  • Problems such as bullying and harassment are common in the armed forces.
  • Armed forces personnel are subject to unduly restrictive terms and conditions of service.
  • Too little recognition is given to the moral impact of military service and subsequent mental health problems.

Also see the work of the Child Rights International Network (CRIN) on recruitment of under-18s into the UK armed forces.

Useful resources

Animated poem about the military recruitment of young people

June 2021

Featured Video Play IconA spoken work poem by artist Potent Whisper, animator Neda Ahmadi, and sound designers Torch & Compass on the military recruitment of young people. See more from CRIN on Should the armed forces recruit children under the age of 18? including a comparison to a recent army recruitment advert and a learning resource from the Quakers in Britain peace education team, to encourage critical thinking about armed forces recruitment and its relationship to human rights.

Recruitment of children to the military in Welsh schools

April 2021

new report by Cymdeithas y Cymod, ForcesWatch and the Peace Pledge Union examines the issue of military recruitment in schools in Wales  an issue steeped in controversy and on which the Welsh government made a series of commitments in a report published in June 2015following a public petition submitted in 2012. Since then, little tangible progress has been made against those commitments, yet military recruitment visits to Welsh schools have continued undiminished. 


Centre for Military Justice

The Centre for Military Justice provide access to free, independent, expert legal advice when dealing with serious bullying, sexual harassment, gender-based violence or other forms of discrimination, including racial discrimination, and to bereaved military families needing legal support and representation when dealing with the aftermath of a service death. The helpline number is 0203 848 6820 or contact them on email.

The British armed forces: Why raising the recruitment age would benefit everyone

2019

A briefing (Child Soldiers International, 2019) making the case for setting 18 as the minimum age for recruitment.


Conscription by poverty? Deprivation and army recruitment in the UK

August 2019

This report from the Child Rights International Network, Conscription by poverty? Deprivation and army recruitment in the UK, states that the UK is the only country in Europe to recruit from age 16 and more soldiers are recruited at 16 than any other age.


Kids with guns

June 2019

Should the armed forces encourage young people to interact with weapons and military vehicles? Our new web resource looks at why is this happening and asks if it is right and how can it be challenged?


Issues relating to Service Complaints system and the youngest armed forces personnel

May 2019
In this written submission to the Defence Committee's inquiry into the work of the Service Complaints Ombudsman, we focus on how issues with the complaints system may affect the youngest serving personnel in the armed forces, particularly those under 18 years old, and recommend that the youngest members of the armed forces are considered as a distinct group in relation to the functioning of the service complaints system.

Selling the Military films

March 2019

Featured Video Play IconAt the launch event for our report with Medact on Selling the Military: A critical analysis of contemporary recruitment marketing in the UK, contributors and participants told us why they think this is an important issue. And a longer film of the presentation summarising the report.

Liberty Soldier’s Rights campaign

The human rights organisation Liberty campaign on Soldier's Rights and have addressed a number of substantial concerns with the military justice system in recent years.

Selling the military: A critical analysis of contemporary recruitment marketing in the UK

February 2019

This report, written by ForcesWatch and published with the public health charity Medact,  analyses the way the armed forces market their careers to adolescents and young people, creating powerful messages that which exploit developmental vulnerabilities and social inequality, risking the health and well-being of recruits. Narratives of camaraderie and self-development also serve to promote an uncontroversial and depoliticised idea of the military more widely which promote self-fulfilment in the context of conflict.


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