Skip to content

Victims' State

War and Welfare in Austria, 1868-1925

Ke-Chin Hsia
Barcode 9780197582374
Book

Sold out
Original price £46.70 - Original price £46.70
Original price
£46.70
£46.70 - £46.70
Current price £46.70

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 21/12/2022

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Social Sciences
Label: Oxford University Press Inc
Language: English
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
Pages: 336

War and Welfare in Austria, 1868-1925. The belligerent country that literally started the First World War, the Habsburg Empire suffered grievously during the global conflict. At the end of the war, it was estimated that 1.2 million soldiers, out of 8 million men and 100,000 women mobilized from an empire of 52 million, perished in service. Among those who lived, the wounded, the disabled, and their dependents constituted at least several million people whose survival was endangered both during and afterthe war. How did the Habsburg Empire confront the scale of the casualties brought about by the First World War? What care and support were offered to disabled soldiers and dead soldiers' surviving dependents? Victims' State offers the first integrated account of how the Austrian half of the empire and the successor Austrian Republic responded to the needs of citizen-soldiers and their families from the nineteenth century to the interwar years. Ke-Chin Hsia traces the policies, ideas, and administrative practices developed over the decades by a range of government, semi-public, and societal actors to deal with the massive losses of lives, health, and livelihoods. The provision of care andwelfare to disabled veterans, war widows, and war orphans shows that compulsory military service and war mobilization profoundly changed the relations between citizens and the Austrian state. The expansion of the Austrian welfare state was consciously undertaken by the Habsburg authorities as well as thesuccessor Austrian Republic to generate support and create legitimacy in times of crisis. In the process, assertive war victims helped create a participatory welfare system and contributed to the democratic transition of 1918-1920. With its incisive analysis, Victims' State underscores the centrality of totalizing war to the making of modern citizenship and the fully-fledged European welfare state.