Eesti ajateenijate hoiakute muutus enne ja pärast täiemahulise sõja algust Ukrainas
Kuupäev
2024
Autorid
Ajakirja pealkiri
Ajakirja ISSN
Köite pealkiri
Kirjastaja
Tartu Ülikool
Abstrakt
The dissertation aimed to identify the change in attitudes of Estonian conscripts before and after
the beginning of the full-scale war in Ukraine. The current international security situation has
brought many changes to Estonia's national defense stance, focusing on the increase in defense
willingness and threat perception among conscripts. Estonia's national defense relies on a reserve
army, including conscripts, and NATO membership. Understanding conscripts’ attitudes towards
security and the service makes it crucial to know their national defense stance. The thesis begins
with a theoretical overview of conscription and its development, highlighting the attitudes
towards conscription in the Baltic states in recent history. It then discusses the security situation
in Ukraine, Russia’s behavior, and the impact of the military situation on individual threat
perception. The final theoretical chapter addresses the relevance of defense willingness in the
context of the war and the attitudes of conscripts, presenting different approaches to the concept.
The attitudes of conscripts were examined through frequency distributions and a binary logistic
regression analysis, with variables divided into attitudes toward defense willingness and threat
perception. The time context was the year 2020/21 before the war began, and 2022/23 after the
war began.
The results illustrate the relationship between conscripts’ attitudes towards defense willingness
and threat perception, with the primary statistically significant demographic factor being the
native language. The perception of threat among conscripts has increased following the outbreak
of the war in Ukraine, raising societal anxiety and stress. Increased threat perception has
influenced defense willingness, which has risen since the beginning of the war. The rise in
defense willingness is reflected in the changing attitudes of conscripts, who now place a higher
value on the necessity of conscription for Estonia's national defense, and are more inclined to
volunteer for service. However, while defense willingness has increased, conscripts still value
individual freedom of choice in their lives, and most do not want to engage in active service after
conscription.