Article

"Assisting in many other ways": An Examination of the Work Undertaken by Scottish Women Humanitarians in Support of Belgian Refugees in the

Details

Citation

Jenkinson J (2024) "Assisting in many other ways": An Examination of the Work Undertaken by Scottish Women Humanitarians in Support of Belgian Refugees in the. Journal of Women's History.

Abstract
Belgian people displaced following the German invasion of their country in 1914 were supported, supervised, and medically treated by female health care professionals, humanitarian volunteers, and ladies' refugee committee members during their wartime stay in Scotland. This article focuses on the exercise of "soft power" while supporting Belgian refugees by these middle-class female care givers who were all associated with the Glasgow Corporation Belgian Refugee Committee (GCBRC). Additionally, the actions of the women here considered form part of what Gatrell has described as a constructed "refugee regime" organized by local and nationwide relief providers. Although the women here assessed delivered crucial everyday support for displaced Belgians, including children, their role was underreported and marginalized in the contemporary record of First World War humanitarian aid in Scotland, and more widely, Great Britain.

Keywords
Women humanitarians; Belgian refugees; First World War; Glasgow Corporation Belgian Refugee Committee 2

Notes
Output Status: Forthcoming

Journal
Journal of Women's History

StatusAccepted
Date accepted by journal11/09/2024
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/36284
ISSN1042-7961
eISSN1527-2036

People (1)

Dr Jacqueline Jenkinson

Dr Jacqueline Jenkinson

Senior Lecturer, History

Files (1)