'in Military Parlance I Suppose We Were Mutineers': Industrial Relations in the Australian Imperial Force During World War I (Essay)
Labour History: A Journal of Labour and Social History 2011, Nov, 101
-
- €2.99
-
- €2.99
Publisher Description
On 8 August 1918, the five Australian divisions that made up the Australian Imperial Force (AIF), working together as a single cohesive unit for the first time in World War I, participated in an offensive that broke the back of the German forces on the Western Front. This is popularly described as the 'black day' of the German army and is often seen as the 'beginning of the end' that, within a few short months, would lead to the signing of the Armistice on 11 November 1918, thus marking the end of hostilities with Germany.
More Books Like This
Manhood and the Militia Myth: Masculinity, Class and Militarism in Ontario, 1902-1914.
1998
Ethnic Labour and British Imperial Trade
2019
Interpreting American Military History at Museums and Historic Sites
2016
War, Racism and Industrial Relations in an Australian Mining Town, 1916-1935.
2007
A Tale of Two Towns: Industrial Pickets, Police Practices and Judicial Review.
2008
'We Have No Redress Unless We Strike': Class, Gender and Activism in the Melbourne Tailoresses' Strike, 1882-83 (Essay)
2009
More Books by Labour History: A Journal of Labour and Social History
A Eulogy for Jeff Shaw (Jeffrey William Shaw) (Obituary)
2010
Larry Adler and the Cold War (Research Report) (Biography)
2011
Governor Macquarie's Job Descriptions and the Bureaucratic Control of the Convict Labour Process (Essay)
2009
Political Activism, Academic Freedom and the Cold War: An American Experience (Firing of New York University Professor Lyman Bradley on Political Grounds) (Essay)
2010
The ACTU Congress of 2006 and Its Aftermath (Research Report) (Australian Council of Trade Unions) (Conference News)
2009
The Rise and Decline of Australian Unionism: A History of Industrial Labour from the 1820S to 2010 (Essay)
2011