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Published byRosa Bishop Modified over 9 years ago
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WWI APEH – supplementary material not found in Kagan
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Increased centralization of government Mass conscription Economic regimentation Gov’t. control on prices, wages, rent Food & supply rationing Regulation of imports & exports Nationalization of transportation & industry Manipulation of public opinion Plight of soldier and role of citizen begin to overlap ▪ “Citizen army” full of national pride & patriotism “fighting” for country’s ultimate victory Increased use of propaganda in all countries HOWEVER dissent does exist esp. after 1916 – liberals and socialists ▪ Worker strikes; military mutinies; independence movements ▪ 1916 Easter Rebellion: IRA rises up against British gov’t. by occupying gov’t. buildings in Dublin
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War Raw Materials Board Run by Walter Rathenau – allocation of imp. raw materials necessary for building effective war machine Food Rationing 1916 = 1350 calories per day; 1917 = 1000 calories per day 750,000 civilians die of starvation 1916 Military Dictatorship Generals Paul von Hindenburg, chief of General Staff & Erich Ludendorff, deputy chief of staff Dec. 2, 1916 Auxiliary Service Law = all male non-combatants aged 17-60 allowed to work only in jobs supporting the war effort GB: July 1915 - PM David Lloyd George forms Ministry of Munitions Private industry would produce war materiel @ a limited profit Defense of the Realm Act – police can arrest dissenters as traitors; public officials can censor the press
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France: up to 1917 no strong leadership Lose 75% of coal & 80% of steel production to German occupation 1917 = Georges Clemenceau ▪ Cracks down on dissention and suppress civil liberties in the name of war Russia – no success at Total War Too autocratic; weak economy; lack of industrial resources; wide-spread ethnic problems; not enough public support
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WWI = great social leveler Inflation hits the middle class harder than other classes Labor movements benefit greatly More widespread collective bargaining practices Unions gain prestige Women become more dominant in workplace Banking institutions Commerce Armament plants & heavy industry Truck driving & farming Women push for equal pay, political equality & financial security BUT by 1919 many women are unemployed and their situation in the workplace is reduced to what it was prior to WWI
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