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Student Archival Essays
- Australia and the Interwar Internationalism Movement
- In her study of the League of Nations Union in Britain, Helen McCarthy argues that “the League of Nations inspired a rich and participatory culture of political unrest, popular education and civic ritual." Was the same true in Australia?
- Interwar Internationalism: Refugees
- A Broad Unity for Peace: An historical examination of the International Peace Campaign’s Australian Peace Congress, 16th – 19th September, 1937
- Interwar Feminism in Australia and the League of Nations
- What were the primary factors in the failure of the League of Nations Union in Australia to create what Helen McCarthy terms a ‘rich and participatory culture of political protest, popular education and civic ritual’?
- Analyze how the ‘Myth of Collective Security’ was cultivated and evolved in Britain, compared to Australia by the LNU
- The League in Nations: the Effects of Identity
- Paths to Peace: A comparison of the voluntary peace groups in Britain and Australia
- The League of Nations: Lessons and Legacy
Australia and the League of Nations
Dublin Core
Title
Australia and the League of Nations
Subject
The League of Nations
Description
[no text]
Creator
A.D Ellis
Source
Public Records of Victoria
Publisher
[no text]
Date
1922
Contributor
[no text]
Rights
[no text]
Relation
[no text]
Format
Book
Language
English
Type
[no text]
Identifier
[no text]
Coverage
[no text]
Text Item Type Metadata
Text
[no text]
Original Format
[no text]
Files
Collection
Citation
A.D Ellis, “Australia and the League of Nations,” Interwar Internationalism: An Archival History, accessed April 26, 2024, https://tretzthurs10.omeka.net/items/show/35.
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