Compulsory military serviceIn 1911 Australia adopted a scheme for the compulsory military training of males. Boys aged twelve had to join the junior cadets, which were mainly school-based and did not wear uniforms. From fourteen until eighteen years they became members of the uniformed senior cadets. From eighteen until 26 years they became members of the citizens' military forces, requiring 16 days' paid training per year until they reached twenty, after which they had to attend an annual muster. The Labor Party supported the scheme because it believed a people's militia was preferable to a standing army. The conservatives supported it because they considered any sort of army an imperial necessity. There was much opposition to the scheme from the wider labour movement and radical circles, who saw it as fostering militarism.
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Boy soldiers.
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