Law in War Law in War

Law in War

Freedom and restriction in Australia during the Great War

    • 11,99 €
    • 11,99 €

Publisher Description

During the Great War law was used in everyday life as a tool to discriminate, oppress, censor, and deprive many Australians of property, liberty, and basic human rights. A nation often amends its laws during war, not least to regulate life at home. Yet few historians have considered the impact of the law on Australians during the First World War. In this original book, Catherine Bond breathes life into the laws that were central to the way people were managed in Australia 1914–18. Engaging and revelatory, Law in War holds those who wrote the laws to account, exposing the sheer breadth and impact of this wartime legal regime: the injustices of which linger to this day. More than anything, it illuminates how ordinary people were caught up in—and sometimes destroyed by—these laws created in the name of victory.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2020
1 July
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
272
Pages
PUBLISHER
University of New South Wales Press
SIZE
5.5
MB

More Books by Catherine Bond

Law in War Law in War
2020
Goldfields and Chrysanthemums. Notes of travel in Australia and Japan. [With plates.] Goldfields and Chrysanthemums. Notes of travel in Australia and Japan. [With plates.]
2011