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  1. Nov 3, 2019 · "the prisoner of war" journal The Red Cross and the St. John War Organisation. Prisoners of War Department. These were found in an old box of paperwork. I've scanned them as best I could. (very brittle) They will be donated to Monbulk RSL for safekeeping.

  2. Aug 15, 2023 · There were 35 million prisoners of war held during World War II. One soldier’s diary full of collages and drawings brings a human dimension to that number. The icon indicates free access to the linked research on JSTOR. “Killed in Action” was the tragic news Lieutenant Joseph “Ed” Carter’s family received from the front.

    • Prisoners of War The Journal1
    • Prisoners of War The Journal2
    • Prisoners of War The Journal3
    • Prisoners of War The Journal4
    • Prisoners of War The Journal5
  3. Aug 18, 2022 · The Prisoner of War magazine. Uncategorised. The Prisoner of War magazine was the official journal of the prisoners of war department of the Red Cross and St John war organisation based at St James’s Palace, London SW1. It was free to the next of kin of POWs. The Prisoner Of War Volume 2 #13,

    • David Lovell
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  5. More prisoners were taken during the Second World War than in any other conflict. Millions of soldiers, sailors and airmen – and also civilians – were held in captivity. Their fate depended on when and where they were captured, and sometimes their nationality or race.

  6. Jun 7, 2010 · The Prisoner of War. Production date. 1942-1945. Description. The official journal of the Prisoner of War Department of the Red Cross and St John War Organisation, St Jame's Palace, London. Collection Type. Archives. Level of Current Record. series.

  7. Aug 29, 2022 · The law of armed conflict prevents the coerced extraction of information from Prisoners of War (PoWs). We claim, however, that the letter of that law involves too broad a concept of coercion. On a natural reading, there is a sense in which any extraction of information—by any method—is coercive. We respect the notion that PoWs ought not be ...

  8. S. P. MacKenzie. University of South Carolina. In any examination of the treatment afforded prisoners of war (POWs), the Second World War stands out both in terms of scale-approximately thirty-five million military personnel spent time in enemy hands between. 1939 and 19451-and in terms of the sheer range of behavior exhibited by.

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