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A Critical History of the American Red Cross, 1882-1945 : The End of Noble Humanitarianism

Part of the Symposium S. series
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It was assumed by many, including the Red Cross, that the Geneva Treaty was being honored, that food parcels were reaching the starving Allied prisoners, and that the Red Cross was relaying accurate information to the homefront concerning the welfare of captive soldiers.

Shealy's work provides data from declassified military documents and Red Cross documents deeded to the National Archives and the library of Congress.

Coupled with mainstream sources, her research offers a revisionist perspective of the American Red Cross era from 1882 to 1945.

Additionally, the Red Cross, usually above reproach, turned the mirror initself with candid monographs written post-WWII to 1950.

These discourse, documents and letters reveal the agency's struggle to reconcile itself with policy not always in step with its recipients.

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Product Details
Edwin Mellen Press Ltd
0773467068 / 9780773467064
Hardback
01/11/2003
United States
English
142 pages, bibliography, index
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More