The American-German Conference on Prisoners of War

1919 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 406-449
Author(s):  
Raymond Stone

When, in 1914, the Great War broke upon an astonished world, we rather took comfort to ourselves in the thought that no matter how swiftly and vigorously military operations might be prosecuted, the Conventions of Geneva and of The Hague would insure humane care and chivalrous treatment to the prisoners of war of both sides. Perhaps unconsciously we based our feeling of assurance in this regard upon two assumptions. The first of these was that the terms of those conventions were of themselves legally binding upon the parties to the great conflict; and the second that in this day and generation of high development in the elements of morality and humanity the belligerents would feel themselves morally if not technically constrained to abide by the principles, and to follow, in practice, the honorable provisions of the conventions.There are two particular conventions falling under consideration in this connection. These are, the Convention Respecting the Laws and Customs of War on Land, generally referred to as Hague IV of 1907; and the Convention for the Adaptation to Maritime War of the Principles of the Geneva Convention of 1906, commonly known as Hague X of 1907. Each of these agreements contains a provisional article, practically identical in the two instances, worded substantially as follows:The provisions contained … in the present convention do not apply except between contracting parties, and only if all the belligerents are parties to the convention.

1985 ◽  
Vol 25 (249) ◽  
pp. 337-363 ◽  
Author(s):  
Françoise Krill

Since the number of women who actually participated in war was insignificant until the outbreak of World War I, the need for special protection for them was not felt prior to that time. This does not imply however that women had previously lacked any protection. From the birth of international humanitarian law, they had had the same general legal protection as men. If they were wounded, women were protected by the provisions of the 1864 Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded in Armies in the Field; if they became prisoners of war, they benefited from the Regulations annexed to the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 on the Laws and Customs of War on Land.


Author(s):  
Ian C. D. Moffat

The Great War was the world event that began the evolution of Canada from a self-governing British colony to a great independent country. However, one of Canada’s failings is its self-deprecation and modesty. Canada has produced a number of historic works documenting and analyzing Canada’s accomplishments and the individuals who made them happen. Although much was written by actual participants in the interwar years, the majority of the objective and analytical works have only slowly emerged after the Second World War when history became a respected academic discipline. This annotated bibliography gives a cross section of the Canadian Great War historiography with the majority of the work having been produced after 1980. The Canadian Army and the role of Canadians serving in the British Royal Flying Corps and Royal Naval Air Service have good coverage in Canadian monographs. The one area of study that has a dearth of work is on the Royal Canadian Navy since it had a very small role in the Great War and did not come into its own until after 1939. Nonetheless, there are a number of works included that show the Navy’s fledgling accomplishments between 1914 and 1918, as well as the efforts of the British Admiralty to restrict the Royal Canadian Navy’s actions in defense of its own area of operations. This bibliography also contains works on prisoners of war, the psychological effects of trench warfare on Canadians serving at the front, the internment of enemy aliens in Canada, and effects of the war on the home front, including one French work analyzing French Quebec’s changing attitude to World War I over the length of the 20th century.


2018 ◽  
pp. 47-72
Author(s):  
Randall Stevenson

Many factors in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries – to an extent, ever since the industrial revolution – extended throughout everyday life forms of the rationalised temporality Conrad encountered so exactingly at sea. These included clocking-in for factory work, F.W. Taylor’s time-and-motion studies, and Ford’s introduction of production lines. Lawrence’s The Rainbow and Women in Love illustrate the spread of reifying forces involved, aptly summarised by Georg Lukács in 1923. The Great War added further to temporal rationalisations imposed on modern life, through military operations requiring still stricter co-ordination than industrial ones, and measures on the Home Front including the introduction of Summer Time in 1916. By 1919, when Armistice Day arrested the entire British population at 11am on 11 November, life and death in the modern world were controlled by the clock more stringently than ever previously. In broadly historical terms, too, the Great War had shattered a sense of continuity in ways reflected in the more fragmented or non-serial forms of fiction developing in the years that followed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 56-76
Author(s):  
Oszkár Gorcsa

The study presents the evolution of the international laws of war, focusing especially on the Geneva and Hague Conventions, which were the first multilateral treaties that addressed the conduct of warfare. Furthermore, I attempt to answer the question of why men kept fighting, why they didn’t choose surrender instead. I also deal with the moment of capture, and the legislations regarding prisoners of war in Austria–Hungary. I also expound on introducing the situations in the austro–hungarian POW camps. Furthermore, the study depicts in detail the economic capability of the state after the outbreak of the Great War.


K@iros ◽  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agnès BERNARD ◽  

These few pages question the management of the distance dependent on techniques of communication, and try to define an evolution corresponding not in their use, but in their impact in the intra-family relation. This study is led from a corpus of soldiers’ letters of the Great War and the conversations administered with serviceman combined arms (air-terre-marine) and his wives.


2015 ◽  
pp. 35-46
Author(s):  
S. I. Cherniavsky

The article is devoted to cooperation between Russia and Spain to assist deported Russian citizen and prisoners of war in 1914–1918.


PMLA ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 121 (5) ◽  
pp. 1565-1576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret R. Higonnet

Why, the war is for children.—Angelo PatriAs the First “Total” War of the Twentieth century, World War I marked a turning point in the understanding of what Goya had called the disasters of war. The years 1914–18 witnessed a difficult struggle to recognize and defend civilian rights in wartime, rights that had primarily been defined as those of soldiers and prisoners of war, under the Taws and Customs of War on Tand, established at The Hague in 1899 and 1907. Wartime conditions that blurred lines between civilian and combatant unleashed violations of civilians' human rights that the conventions had not anticipated. The ensuing debate during the Great War exemplified the growing complexity of disputes about human rights. In particular, it revealed that competing claims of victimization could exacerbate reprisals in the confusion of combat. In a duel of countercharges, states published documentation carrying titles that denounced enemy indifference to the “law of nations,” such as Die volkerrechtswidrige Fuhrung des belgischen Volkskriegs (“The Conduct of the Belgian People's War in Violation of the Taw of Nations” [1915]) and Rapports… en vue de constater les actes commis par l'ennemi en violation du droit des gens (“Reports … to Record Enemy Actions in Violation of the Taw of Nations” [1915]). A “war of words” raged, as well as a war of dumdum bullets that spread on impact, poison gas, and aerial bombardment—all instruments of war that had been explicitly banned by the conventions of the preceding years.


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