Description |
xiv, 476 pages, 40 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, portraits ; 26 cm |
Contents |
Foreword -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- 1 The Road to Repat -- 2 Pensions and Patriotism -- 3 Farms for Heroes -- 4 A Great National Question -- 5 Ninety-Nine Chances -- 6 Military Repartriation -- 7 Medical Repatriation 1914-21 -- 8 Homes for Heroes -- 9 The Silent Cities -- 10 The Cyanide Gang -- 11 Out of the Limelight -- 12 Organisation and Money -- 13 And Again -- 14 New Wars, Old Battles -- 15 Consolidation and reform -- 16 Be In It, Mate! -- 17 From Repat to Vets' Affairs -- 18 Adversaries -- 19 Change and Innovation -- 20 The Last Shilling? -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index |
Summary |
Senator Edward Millen, who conveived and nurtured Australia's repatriation system, described repatriation of returned service personnel as just as much 'an emanation of the heart' as a cause 'worthy of the last shilling'. It had been a concern to Australians since the Boer War, but it was not until 1918 that an entire government department (now the Department of Veterans' Affairs) came into being to address this concer. Drawing on a wealth of Departmental archives and othe unpublished material, Clem Lloyd and Jacqui Rees have provided a frank account of an institution that, from soldier settlement schemes to Agent Orange, has responded to the needs of returned service people in a generous and open-hearted way. In a series of chronological and thematic chapters the authors explore the many functions and practices of 'Repat' - from hospitals to scholarships, training programmes to home loans - culminating in an examination of the Department of Veterans' Affairs in the 1980s. The book gives rare insights into successive ministers and prime ministers, senior administrators and front-line staff, returned service personnel and their families. In the course of its 75-year history, the activities of 'Repat' have touched the lives of almost everyone, yet, until now, the makers of policy and those who implemented it have been largely unknown and invisible. Taking in subjects such as Australia's relations with her military allies, the relationship of the Department to other welfacre policies, and the changing nature of Australian society since World War I, the book is a fascinating account of one of Australia's most enguring concerns. (Inside cover) |
Analysis |
Dept of Veterans Affairs |
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Federal issue |
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History |
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Repatriation Commission |
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Repatriation hospitals |
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Veterans |
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Veterans entitlements |
Notes |
CIP confirmed |
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Includes index |
Bibliography |
Bibliography: pages 431-443 |
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Includes index |
Subject |
Australia. Department of Veterans' Affairs -- History.
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Australia. Department of Veterans' Affairs.
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Veterans -- Government policy -- Australia -- History.
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Veterans -- Government policy -- Australia.
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Veterans -- Services for -- Australia -- History.
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Veterans -- Australia -- Social conditions -- History.
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Veterans -- Australia -- Social conditions.
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Author |
Rees, Jacqueline.
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LC no. |
94156098 |
ISBN |
0522845088 |
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