Bibliographic Information

Manpower and the armies of the British Empire in the two world wars

edited by Douglas E. Delaney, Mark Frost, and Andrew L. Brown

Cornell University Press, 2021

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 277-281) and index

Summary: "Examines how the British Empire and Commonwealth mobilized manpower for the armed services, agriculture, and industry during the two world wars and how they cared for veterans, both able-bodied and disabled, when the fighting was over"-- Provided by publisher

Contents of Works

  • The Government that could not say no and Australia's military effort, 1914-1918 / Jean Bou
  • Irish identities in the British army during the First World War / Richard S. Grayson
  • Conserving British manpower during and after the First World War / Jessica Meyer
  • The Canadian Garrison Artillery goes to war, 1914-1918 / Roger Sarty
  • "Returning home to fight": Bristolians in the dominion armies, 1914-1918 / Kent Fedorowich and Charles Booth
  • Martial race rheory and recruitment in the Indian army during two world wars / Kaushik Roy
  • Manpower, training and the battlefield leadership of British army officers in the era of the two world wars / Gary Sheffield
  • Legitimacy, consent, and the mobilization of the British and commonwealth armies during the Second World War / Jonathan Fennell
  • "Enemy aliens" and the formation of Australia's 8th employment company / Paul R. Bartrop
  • The body and becoming a soldier in Britain during the Second World War / Emma Newlands
  • Canada and the mobilization of manpower during the Second World War / Daniel Byers
  • South African manpower and the Second World War / Ian van der Waag
  • Manpower mobilization and rehabilitation in New Zealand's Second World War / Ian McGibbon
  • Caring for British commonwealth soldiers in the aftermath of the Second World War / Meghan Fitzpatrick

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