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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
How the League of Nations Works
Told for Young People
Dublin Core
Title
How the League of Nations Works
Told for Young People
Told for Young People
Subject
[no text]
Description
[no text]
Creator
Kathleen E. Innes
Source
Public Records of Victoria
Publisher
Hogarth Press
Date
1928
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
Citation
Kathleen E. Innes, “How the League of Nations Works
Told for Young People,” Interwar Internationalism: An Archival History, accessed April 25, 2024, https://tretzthurs10.omeka.net/items/show/44.
Told for Young People,” Interwar Internationalism: An Archival History, accessed April 25, 2024, https://tretzthurs10.omeka.net/items/show/44.
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