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Home front during World War II

The term "home front" covers the activities of the civilians in a nation at war. World War II was a total war; homeland military production became even more invaluable to both the Allied and Axis powers. Life on the home front during World War II was a significant part of the war effort for all participants and had a major impact on the outcome of the war. Governments became involved with new issues such as rationing, manpower allocation, home defense, evacuation in the face of air raids, and response to occupation by an enemy power. The morale and psychology of the people responded to leadership and propaganda. Typically women were mobilized to an unprecedented degree.

INF3-160 Fighting Fit in the Factory. British poster by A. R. Thomson

All of the powers used lessons from their experiences on the home front during World War I. Their success in mobilizing economic output was a major factor in supporting combat operations. Among morale-boosting activities that also benefited combat efforts, the home front engaged in a variety of scrap drives for materials crucial to the war effort such as metal, rubber, and rags. Such drives helped strengthen civilian morale and support for the war effort. Each country tried to suppress negative or defeatist rumors.

Salvage – Help put the lid on Hitler by saving your old metal and paper

The major powers devoted 50–61 percent of their total GDP to munitions production. The Allies produced about three times as much in munitions as the Axis powers.

Munitions Production in World War II
(Expenditures in billions of dollars, US 1944 munitions prices)
Country/Alliance Year
Average
1935-39
1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 Total
1939–44
U.S.A. 0.3 1.5 4.5 20.0 38.0 42.0 106.3
Britain 0.5 3.5 6.5 9.0 11.0 11.0 41.5
U.S.S.R. 1.6 5.0 8.5 11.5 14.0 16.0 56.6
Allies Total 2.4 10.0 20.0 41.5 64.5 70.5 204.4
Germany 2.4 6.0 6.0 8.5 13.5 17.0 53.4
Japan 0.4 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.5 6.0 16.9
Axis Total 2.8 7.0 8.0 11.5 18.0 23.0 70.3

Source: Goldsmith data in Harrison (1988) p. 172

Real Value Consumer Spending
Country Year
1937 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945
Japan 100 107 109 111 108 99 93 78
Germany 100 108 117 108 105 95 94 85
USA 100 96 103 108 116 115 118 122

Source: Jerome B Cohen, Japan's Economy in War and Reconstruction (1949) p 354

Allies

The Allies called themselves the "United Nations" (even before that organization formed in 1945), and pledged their support to the Atlantic Charter of 1941. The Charter stated the ideal goals of the war: no territorial aggrandizement; no territorial changes made against the wishes of the people; restoration of self-government to those deprived of it; free access to raw materials; reduction of trade restrictions; global cooperation to secure better economic and social conditions for all; freedom from fear and want; freedom of the seas; and abandonment of the use of force, as well as the disarmament of aggressor nations.

Belgium

The sudden German invasion of neutral Belgium in May 1940 led in a matter of 18 days to the collapse of the Belgian army; King Leopold obtained an armistice that involved direct German military administration. The King refused the government's demand that he flee with them to Britain; he remained as a puppet ruler under German control. The Belgian bureaucracy remained in place and generally cooperated with the German rulers. Two pro-German movements, the Flemish National Union comprising Flemish (Dutch-speaking) separatists and the Walloon (French-speaking) Rexists led by Léon Degrelle (1906–94), supported the invaders and encouraged their young men to volunteer for the German army.[1] Small but active resistance movements, largely Communist, provided intelligence to the Allies. During the Holocaust in Belgium, the Nazis hunted down the 70,000 Jews living in Belgium, most of them refugees, and killed 29,000 of them.[2]

The Germans expected to exploit Belgium's industrial resources to support their war machine. Their policies created severe shortages for the Belgian people, but shipped out far less than Germany had expected. They set up the "Armaments Inspection Board" in 1940 to relay munitions orders to factories; the Board came under the control of the German Minister of Armaments, Albert Speer in 1943, and had offices in industrial areas that were supposed to facilitate orders for materiél, and supervise production. However, factory production fell sharply after 1942. Although collaboration with the Nazis, especially among the Flemish, was evident in 1940, it soon faded in importance. Labor strikes and systematic sabotage slowed production, as did the emigration of workers to rural areas, Allied bombing, food shortages, and worker resentment of forced labor.[3]

The Allies retook all of Belgium in September 1944 as the Germans retreated. They reappeared briefly during the hard fighting of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, but were finally expelled in January 1945. The London‐based government‐in‐exile returned, but had to confront the resistance movements that demanded radical political change.[4]

China

China suffered the second highest number of casualties of the entire war. Civilians in the occupied territories had to endure many large-scale massacres, including that in Nanjing, Jiangsu and Pingdingshan, Liaoning[citation needed]. In a few areas, the Japanese army also unleashed newly developed biological weapons on Chinese civilians, leading to an estimated 200,000 dead.[5] Tens of thousands died when Kuomintang (Nationalist) troops broke the levees of the Yangtze to stop the Japanese advance after the loss of the Chinese capital, Nanjing. Millions more Chinese died because of famine during the war.

At the end of the war Japan was bombed with two atomic bombs and surrendered. Japan had captured major coastal cities like Shanghai early in the war, cutting the rest of China off from its chief sources of finance and industry. Millions of Chinese moved to remote western regions to avoid invasion. Cities like Kunming ballooned with new arrivals. Entire factories and universities were relocated to safe areas so society could still function. Japan replied with hundreds of air raids on the new capital, Chongqing.[citation needed]

Although China received much aid from the United States, China did not have sufficient infrastructure to properly arm or even feed its military forces, let alone its civilians.[citation needed]

China was divided into three zones, with the Nationalists led by Chiang Kai-shek(Chiang or Jiang) the southwest and the Communists led by Mao Zedong (Mao) in control of much of the northwest. Coastal areas were occupied by the Japanese, and civilians were treated harshly[citation needed]; some young men were drafted into the puppet Chinese army.

France

After the stunningly quick defeat in June 1940, France was knocked out of the war; part of it, with its capital in Vichy, became an informal ally of the Germans. A powerful Resistance movement sprang up, as the Germans fortified the coast against an Allied invasion and occupied the northern half of the country.[6] The Germans captured 2,000,000 French soldiers, and kept them as prisoners of war in camps inside of Germany for the duration of the war, using them as hostages to guarantee French cooperation. The Vichy French government cooperated closely with the Germans, sending food, machinery and workers to Germany. Several hundred thousand Frenchmen and women were forced to work in German factories, or volunteered to do so, as the French economy itself deteriorated. Nevertheless, there was a strong Resistance movement, with fierce anti-resistance activities carried out by the Nazis and the French police. Most Jews were rounded up by the Vichy police and handed over to the Germans, who sent them to death camps.[7][8]

War wives

The two million French soldiers held as POWs and forced laborers in Germany throughout the war were not at risk of death in combat, but the anxieties of separation for their 800,000 wives were high. The government provided a modest allowance, but one in ten became prostitutes to support their families.[9] Meanwhile, the Vichy regime promoted a highly traditional model of female roles.[10] After the war, France gave women the vote and additional legal and political rights, although nothing on the scale of the enfranchisement that followed World War I.

Food shortages of the home front

Women suffered shortages of all varieties of consumer goods and the absence of the men in POW camps.[11] The rationing system was stringent and very badly managed, leading to pronounced malnourishment, black markets and hostility to state management of the food supply. The Germans seized about 20% of the French food production, which caused severe disruption to the household economy of the French people.[12] French farm production fell by half because of the lack of fuel, fertilizer and workers; even so, the Germans seized half the meat and 20% of the produce.[13]

Supply problems quickly affected French stores, which lacked most items. The government responded by rationing, but German officials set the policies and hunger prevailed, especially affecting young people in urban areas. In shops, the queues lengthened. Some people—including German soldiers who could take advantage of arbitrary exchange rates that favored Germany—benefited from the black market, where food was sold without coupons at very high prices. Farmers diverted meat to the black market, so there was much less for the open market. Counterfeit food coupons were also in circulation. Direct buying from farmers in the countryside and barter against cigarettes became common. These activities were strictly forbidden, and carried the risk of confiscation and fines. Food shortages were most acute in the large cities. Vitamin deficiencies and malnutrition were prevalent.[14]

Advice about eating a healthier diet and home growing produce was distributed. Slogans like "Digging for Victory" and "Make Do and Mend" appeared on national posters and became a part of the war effort. The city environment made these efforts nearly negligible.[15] In the more remote country villages, however, clandestine slaughtering, vegetable gardens and the availability of milk products permitted survival. The official ration provided starvation-level diets of 1,300 or fewer calories a day (5400 kJ), supplemented by home gardens and, especially, black market purchases.[16]

Netherlands

The Dutch famine of 1944, known as the Hongerwinter ("Hunger winter") was a man-made famine imposed by Germany in the occupied western provinces during the winter of 1944–1945. A German blockade cut off food and fuel shipments from farm areas. A total of 4.5 million people were affected, of whom 18,000 died, despite an elaborate system of emergency soup kitchens.[17]

Poland

Food deprivation as a Nazi weapon

The Nazi Hunger Plan was to kill the Jews of Poland quickly, and slowly to force the Poles to leave by threat of starvation, so that they could be replaced by German settlers. The Nazis coerced Poles to work in Germany by providing favorable food rations for families who had members working in the Reich. The ethnic German population in Poland (Volksdeutsche) were given good rations and were allowed to shop for food in special stores. The German occupiers created a draconian system of food controls, including severe penalties for the omnipresent black market. There was a sharp increase in mortality due to the general malnutrition, and a decline in birth rates.[18][19][20][21]

By mid 1941, the German minority in Poland received 2,613 calories (11,000 kJ) per day, while Poles received 699 and Jews in the ghetto 184.[22] The Jewish ration fulfilled just 7.5% of their daily needs; Polish rations only 26%. Only the ration allocated to Germans provided the full required calorie intake.[23]

Distribution of food in Nazi occupied Poland as of December 1941[24]

Nationality Daily Calorie intake
Germans 2,310
Foreigners 1,790
Ukrainians 930
Poles 654
Jews 184(54)[clarification needed]

Additionally the Generalplan Ost of the Nazis, which envisioned the elimination of the Slavic population in the occupied territories and artificial famines-as proposed in the Hunger Plan, were to be used.[clarification needed]

Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto: 1943

On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland, conquering it in three weeks, as the Soviets invaded the eastern areas. During the German occupation, there were two distinct civilian uprisings in Warsaw, one in 1943, the other in 1944. The first took place in a zone less than two square miles (5 km2) in area, which the Germans had carved out of the city and called Ghetto Warschau. The Germans built high walls around the ghetto, and crowded 550,000 Polish Jews into it, many from the Polish provinces. At first, people were allowed to enter and leave the ghetto, but soon its border became an "iron curtain".[25]

Unless on official business, Jews could not leave, and non-Jews, including Germans, could not enter. Entry points were guarded by German soldiers. Because of extreme conditions and hunger, mortality in the ghetto was high. In 1942, the Germans moved 400,000 ghetto residents to Treblinka where they were gassed on arrival. By April 19, 1943, when the Ghetto Uprising commenced, the population of the ghetto had dwindled to 60,000 individuals. In the following three weeks, virtually all died as the Germans fought and systematically destroyed the buildings in the ghetto.[26]

Warsaw Uprising of 1944

The uprising by Poles began on August 1, 1944, when the Polish underground, the "Home Army", aware that the Soviet Army had reached the eastern bank of the Vistula, sought to liberate Warsaw much as the French resistance had liberated Paris a few weeks earlier. Joseph Stalin had his own group of Communist leaders for the new Poland and did not want the Home Army or its leaders (based in London) to control Warsaw. So he halted the Soviet offensive and gave the Germans free rein to suppress it. During the ensuing 63 days, 250,000 Poles of the Home Army surrendered to the Germans. After the Germans forced all the surviving population to leave the city, Hitler ordered that any buildings left standing be dynamited – 98 percent of the buildings in Warsaw were destroyed.[27]

Soviet Union

 
1941 Soviet poster: "Work in the rear as at the front: every ton of bread, coal, oil, steel hits the enemy"

During the invasion of the Soviet Union in the early months of the war, rapid German advances almost captured the cities of Moscow and Leningrad. The bulk of Soviet industry which could not be evacuated was either destroyed or lost due to German occupation. Agricultural production was interrupted, with grain crops left standing in the fields. This caused hunger reminiscent of the early 1930s. In one of the greatest feats of war logistics, factories were evacuated on an enormous scale, with 1,523 factories dismantled and shipped eastwards along four principal routes to the Caucasus, Central Asia, the Ural, and Siberia.[28] In general, the tools, dies and production technology were moved, along with the blueprints and their management, engineering staffs and skilled labor.

The whole of the Soviet Union became dedicated to the war effort. The people of the Soviet Union were probably better prepared than any other nation involved in World War II to endure the material hardships of the war, primarily because they were so used to shortages and economic crisis in the past, especially during wartime (World War I had brought similar restrictions on food).[29] Conditions were nevertheless severe. World War II was especially devastating to citizens of the USSR because it was fought on Soviet territory and caused massive destruction. In Leningrad, under German siege, over a million people died of starvation and disease. Many factory workers were teenagers, women and old people.[30]

 
Propaganda in wartime Lviv: the text reads "Destroy the German monster!"

The government implemented rationing in 1941 and first applied it to bread, flour, cereal, pasta, butter, margarine, vegetable oil, meat, fish, sugar and confectionery all across the country. The rations remained largely stable during the war. Off-ration food was often so expensive that it could not add substantially to a citizen's food supply unless they were especially well-paid. Peasants received no rations and had to make do with any local resources they farmed themselves. Most rural peasants struggled and lived in unbearable poverty, but others sold their surplus food at a high price; a few became rouble millionaires, until a currency reform two years after the end of the war wiped out their wealth.[31]

Despite harsh conditions, the war led to a spike in Soviet nationalism and unity. Soviet propaganda toned down extreme Communist rhetoric of the past as the people now rallied to protect their Motherland against the evils of the German invaders. Ethnic minorities thought to be collaborators were forced into exile. Religion, which was previously shunned, became a part of a Communist Party propaganda campaign to mobilize religious people.[32]

Soviet society changed drastically during the war. There was a burst of marriages in June and July 1941 between people about to be separated by the war, and in the next few years the marriage rate dropped off steeply, with the birth rate following shortly thereafter to only about half of what it would have been in peacetime. For this reason mothers with several children during the war received substantial honors and money benefits if they had several children—mothers could earn around 1,300 rubles for having their fourth child and up to 5,000 rubles for their tenth.[33]

Survival in Leningrad

The city of Leningrad endured more suffering and hardships than any other city in the Soviet Union during World War II. Hunger, malnutrition, disease, starvation, and even cannibalism became common during the siege, which lasted from September 1941 until January 1944. Many people lost weight, and grew weaker and more vulnerable to disease. If malnutrition persisted for long enough, its effects were irreversible. People's feelings of loyalty disappeared if they got hungry enough; they would steal from their closest family members in order to survive.[34]

Only some of the citizens of Leningrad survived. Only 400,000 were evacuated before the siege began; this left 4.5 million in Leningrad, including 700,000 children. Subsequently, more managed to escape; especially when the nearby Lake Ladoga froze over and people could walk over the ice road—or "road of life"—to safety.[35] Those in influential political or social positions used their connections to other elites to leave Leningrad both before and after the siege began. Some factory owners even looted state funds to secure transport out of the city during the first summer of the war.[36] The most risky means of escape, however, was to defect to the enemy and hope to avoid governmental punishment.

Most survival strategies during the siege, though, involved staying within the city and facing the problems through resourcefulness or luck: for instance by securing factory employment, because many factories became autonomous and possessed more of the requirements for survival during the winter, such as food and heat. Workers received larger rations than other civilians, and factories were likely to have electricity if they produced vital goods. Factories also served as mutual support centers, and had clinics and other services like cleaning crews and teams of women who would sew and repair clothes. Factory employees were still driven to desperation on occasion and people resorted to eating glue or horsemeat in factories where food was scarce, but factory employment was the most consistently successful method of survival, and at some food production plants not a single person died.[37]

Survival opportunities open to the wider Soviet community included barter and farming on private land. Black markets thrived as private barter and trade became more common, especially between soldiers and civilians. Soldiers, who had more food to spare, were eager to trade with civilians who had extra warm clothes to exchange. Planting vegetable gardens in the spring became popular, primarily because citizens could keep everything grown on their own plots. The campaign also had a potent psychological effect and boosted morale, a survival component almost as crucial as bread.[38]

Many of the most desperate Soviet citizens turned to crime to support themselves. Most common was the theft of food and of ration cards; this could prove fatal for a malnourished person if their card was stolen more than a day or two before a new card was issued. For these reasons, the stealing of food was severely punished and a person could be shot for as little as stealing a loaf of bread. More serious crimes such as murder and cannibalism also occurred, and special police squads were set up to combat these crimes, though by the end of the siege, roughly 1,500 had been arrested for cannibalism.[39]

 
A US Government publicity photo of American machine tool worker in Texas.

United States

In the United States, farming and other production was increased. For example, citizens were encouraged to plant "victory gardens", personal farms that children sometimes worked on.[40] Sociologist Alecea Standlee (2010) argues that during the war the traditional gender division of labor changed somewhat, as the "home" or domestic female sphere expanded to include the "home front"; meanwhile the public sphere—the male domain—was redefined as the international stage of military action.[41]

The Philippines

The Philippines was an American possession on the way to independence (scheduled in 1946) and controlled its own internal affairs. The Japanese invaded and quickly conquered the islands in early 1942. The Japanese military authorities immediately began organizing a new government structure in the Philippines and established the Philippine Executive Commission. They initially organized a Council of State, through which they directed civil affairs until October 1943, when they declared the Philippines an independent republic. The Japanese-sponsored Second Philippine Republic headed by President José P. Laurel proved to be ineffective and unpopular as Japan maintained very tight controls.[42]

Japanese occupation of the Philippines was opposed by large-scale underground and guerrilla activity. The Philippine Army, as well as remnants of the U.S. Army Forces Far East continued to fight the Japanese in a guerrilla war. They formed an auxiliary unit of the United States Army. Their effectiveness was such that by the end of the war, Japan controlled only twelve of the forty-eight provinces. One element of resistance in the Central Luzon area was furnished by the Hukbalahap, which armed some 30,000 people and extended their control over much of Luzon.[43] The Allies as well as the combined American and Filipino soldiers invaded in 1944–45; the battle for Manila was contested street by street with large numbers of civilians killed.

As in most occupied countries, crime, looting, corruption, and black markets were endemic.[44] With a view of building up the economic base of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, the Japanese Army envisioned using the islands as a source of agricultural products needed by its industry. For example, Japan had a surplus of sugar from Taiwan, and a severe shortage of cotton, so they try to grow cotton on sugar lands with disastrous results. They lacked the seeds, pesticides, and technical skills to grow cotton. Jobless farm workers flock to the cities, where there was minimal relief and few jobs.[45]

The Japanese Army also tried using cane sugar for fuel, castor beans and copra for oil, derris for quinine, cotton for uniforms, and abaca (hemp) for rope. The plans were very difficult to implement in the face of limited skills, collapsed international markets, bad weather, and transportation shortages. The program was a failure that gave very little help to Japanese industry, and diverted resources needed for food production.[46] As Karnow reports, Filipinos "rapidly learned as well that 'co-prosperity' meant servitude to Japan's economic requirements."[47]

Living conditions were bad throughout the Philippines during the war. Transportation between the islands was difficult because of lack of fuel. Food was in very short supply, with sporadic famines and epidemic diseases.[48][49]

The Japanese tried to remove all Western and American cultural influences. They met fierce resistance when they tried to undermine the Catholic Church by arresting 500 Christian missionaries. The Filipinos came to feel morally superior to the brutal Japanese and rejected their advances.[50] Newspapers and the media were tightly censored. The Japanese tried to reshape schools and impose the Japanese language. They formed neighborhood associations to inform on the opposition.[51]

Britain and Commonwealth

Conscription was the main means for raising forces in Britain and the dominions. This was a reversal of policy from 1914, when too many men who were vitally needed on the home front volunteered for the military.[52]

Britain

Britain's total mobilisation during this period proved to be successful in winning the war, by maintaining strong support from public opinion. The war was a "people's war" that enlarged democratic aspirations and produced promises of a postwar welfare state.[53][54]

Munitions

In mid-1940, the Royal Air Force (RAF) was called on to fight the Battle of Britain, but suffered serious losses. It lost 458 aircraft in France[when?]—more than current production— and was hard pressed. The government decided to concentrate on only five types of aircraft in order to optimise output. They were: Wellingtons, Whitley Vs, Blenheims, Hurricanes and Spitfires. These aircraft received extraordinary priority, which covered the supply of materials and equipment and even made it possible to divert from other types the necessary parts, equipment, materials and manufacturing resources. Labour was moved from other aircraft work to factories engaged on the specified types. Cost was no object. The delivery of new fighters rose from 256 in April to 467 in September—more than enough to cover the losses—and Fighter Command emerged triumphantly from the Battle of Britain in October with more aircraft than it had possessed at the beginning.[55] Starting in 1941, the US provided munitions through Lend-Lease that totalled $15.5 billion[56]

Rationing
 
Wartime food and cookery demonstrations, 1940.
 
A British Restaurant in London, 1942. 2000 were opened to serve low-cost basic meals.[57]

Food, clothing, petrol, leather and other items were rationed. Perishable items such as fruit were not rationed. Access to luxuries was severely restricted, although there was also a significant black market. Families also grew "victory gardens", and small home vegetable gardens. Many goods were conserved to turn into weapons later, such as fat for nitroglycerin production. People in the countryside were less affected by rationing as they had greater access to locally sourced unrationed products than people in cities, and were more able to grow their own.

The rationing system, which was originally based on a specific basket of goods for each consumer, was much improved by switching to a points system which allowed housewives to make choices based on their own priorities. Food rationing also permitted the upgrading of the quality of the food available, and housewives approved—except for the absence of white bread and the government's imposition of an unpalatable wheat meal "national loaf". Surveys of public opinion showed that most Britons were pleased that rationing brought equality and a guarantee of a decent meal at an affordable cost.[58]

Evacuation

From very early in the war, it was thought that the major industrial cities of Britain, especially London, would come under Luftwaffe air attack; this did happen in The Blitz. Some children were sent to Canada, the US and Australia, and millions of children and some mothers were evacuated from London and other major cities to safer parts of the country when the war began, under government plans for the evacuation of civilians, but they often filtered back. When the Blitz bombing began on September 6, 1940, they evacuated again. The discovery of the poor health and hygiene of evacuees was a shock to many Britons, and helped prepare the way for the Beveridge Report. Children were evacuated if their parents agreed; but in some cases they had no choice. The children were only allowed to take a few things with them, including a gas mask, books, money, clothes, ration book and some small toys.[59][60]

Welfare state

An Emergency Hospital Service was established at the beginning of the war, in the expectation that it would be required to deal with large numbers of casualties.

A common theme called for an expansion of the welfare state as a reward to the people for their wartime sacrifices.[61] This was set out in a famous report by William Beveridge. It recommended that the various forms of assistance that had grown up piecemeal since 1911 be rationalised. Unemployment benefits and sickness benefits were to be universal. There would be new benefits for maternity. The old-age pension system would be revised and expanded, and require that a person retired. A full-scale National Health Service would provide free medical care for everyone. All the major political parties endorsed the principles, and they were largely put into effect when peace returned.[62]

Memory

The themes of equality and sacrifice were dominant during the war, and in the memory of the war. Historian Jose Harris points out that the war was seen at the time and by a generation of writers as a period of outstanding national unity and social solidarity. There was little antiwar sentiment during or after the war. Furthermore, Britain turned more toward the collective welfare state during the war, expanding it in the late 1940s and reaching a broad consensus supporting it across party lines. By the 1970s and 1980s, however, historians were exploring the subtle elements of continuing diversity and conflict in society during the war period.[63] For example, at first historians emphasized that strikes became illegal in July 1940, and no trade union called one during the war. Later historians pointed to the many localised unofficial strikes, especially in coal mining, shipbuilding, the metal trades and engineering, with as many as 3.7 million man days lost in 1944.[64]

The BBC collected 47,000 wartime recollections and 15,000 images in 2003-6 and put them online.[65] The CD audiobook Home Front 1939–45 also contains a selection of period interviews and actuality recordings.[66]

Canada

 
Two boys in Montreal gather rubber for wartime salvage, 1942.

Canada joined the war effort on September 10, 1939; the government deliberately waited after Britain's decision to go to war, partly to demonstrate its independence from Britain and partly to give the country extra time to import arms from the United States as a non-belligerent.[67] War production was ramped up quickly, and was centrally managed through the Department of Munitions and Supply. Unemployment faded away.

Canada became one of the largest trainers of pilots for the Allies through the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan. Many Canadian men joined the war effort, so with them overseas and industries pushing to increase production, women took up positions to aid in the war effort. The hiring of men in many positions in civilian employment was effectively banned later in the war through measures taken under the National Resources Mobilization Act..

Shipyards and repair facilities expanded dramatically as over a thousand warships and cargo vessels were built, along with thousands of auxiliary craft, small boats and others.[68]

Canada expanded food production, but shipped so much to Britain that food rationing had to be imposed. In 1942 it shipped to Britain 25 per cent of total meat production (including 75% of the bacon), 65% of the cheese and 13% of the eggs.[69]

Ethnic minorities from enemy countries

20% of Canada's population were neither of British nor French origin, and their status was of special concern. The main goal was to integrate the marginalized European ethnicities—in contrast to the First World War policy of internment camps for Ukrainians and Germans. In the case of Germany, Italy and especially Japan, the government watched minorities closely for signs of loyalty to their homelands. The fears proved groundless.[70] In February 1942 21,000 Japanese Canadians were rounded up and sent to internment camps that closely resembled similar camps in the US, because the two governments had agreed in 1941 to coordinate their evacuation policies.[71] Most had lived in British Columbia, but in 1945 they were released from detention and allowed to move anywhere in Canada except British Columbia, or they could go to Japan. Most went to the Toronto area.[72][73]

Women
 
Shop stewards in the canteen of the Burrard Dry Dock in North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Commencing in 1942, Burrard Dry Dock hired over 1000 women, all of whom were dismissed at the end of the war to make way for returning men.

Canadian women responded to urgent appeals to make do, recycle and salvage in order to come up with needed supplies. They saved fats and grease; gathered recycled goods; handed out information on the best ways to get the most out of recycled goods; and organized many other events to decrease the amount of waste. Volunteer organizations led by women also prepared packages for the military overseas and for prisoners of war in Axis countries.

With World War II came a dire need for employees in the workplace. Without women to step in, the economy would have collapsed. By autumn 1944 there were twice as many women working full-time in Canada's paid labour force as in 1939: between 1.0 and 1.2 million; and this did not include part-time workers or women working on farms."[74] Women had to take on this intensive labour and still find time to make jam, clothes, and undertake other acts of volunteering to aid the men overseas.

Australia

The government greatly expanded its powers in order to better direct the war effort, and Australia's industrial and human resources were focused on supporting the Australian and American armed forces.

 
Australian women were encouraged to contribute to the war effort by joining one of the female branches of the armed forces or participating in the labour force.

Australia entered the war in 1939 and sent its forces to fight the Germans in the Middle East (where they were successful) and Singapore (where they were captured by the Japanese in 1942). By 1943, 37% of the Australian GDP was directed at the war effort. Total war expenditure came to £2,949 million between 1939 and 1945.[75]

The Curtin Labor Government took over in October 1941, and energised the war effort, with rationing of scarce fuel, clothing and some food. When Japan entered the war in December 1941, the danger was at hand, and all women and children were evacuated from Darwin and northern Australia. The Commonwealth Government took control of all income taxation in 1942, which gave it extensive new powers and greatly reduced the states' financial autonomy.[76]

Manufacturing grew rapidly, with the assembly of high performance guns and aircraft a specialty. The number of women working in factories rose from 171,000 to 286,000.[77] The arrival of tens of thousands of Americans was greeted with relief, as they could protect Australia where Britain could not. The US sent in $1.1 billion in Lend Lease, and Australia returned about the same total in services, food, rents and supplies to the Americans.[78]

Three major incidents that took place on Australian territory were the Bombing of Darwin, the attack on Sydney Harbour and the Cowra breakout.

New Zealand

New Zealand, with a population of 1.7 million, including 99,000 Maori, was highly mobilised during the war. The Labour party was in power and promoted unionisation and the welfare state. The armed forces peaked at 157,000 in September 1942; 135,000 served abroad, and 10,100 died. Agriculture expanded, sending record supplies of meat, butter and wool to Britain. When American forces arrived, they were fed as well. The nation spent £574 million on the war, of which 43% came from taxes, 41% from loans and 16% from American Lend Lease. It was an era of prosperity as the national income soared from £158 million in 1937 to £292 million in 1944. Rationing and price controls kept inflation to only 14% during 1939–45.[79][80]

Montgomerie shows that the war dramatically increased the roles of women, especially married women, in the labour force. Most of them took traditional female jobs. Some replaced men but the changes here were temporary and reversed in 1945. After the war, women left traditional male occupations and many women gave up paid employment to return home. There was no radical change in gender roles but the war intensified occupational trends under way since the 1920s.[81][82]

India

During World War II, India was a colony of Britain known as British Raj. Britain declared war on behalf of India without consulting with Indian leaders.[83] This resulted in resignation of Congress Ministries.[84]

The British recruited some 2.5 million Indians, who played major roles as soldiers in the Middle East, North Africa and Burma in the British Indian Army. India became the main base for British operations against Japan, and for American efforts to support China.

In Bengal, with an elected Muslim local government under British supervision, the cutoff of rice imports from Burma led to severe food shortages, made worse by maladministration. Prices soared and millions starved because they could not buy food. In the Bengal famine of 1943, three million people died.[85]

An anti-British force of about 40,000 men (and a few women), the Indian National Army (INA) under Subhas Chandra Bose, formed in Southeast Asia. It was under Japanese army control and performed poorly in combat. Its members were captured Indian soldiers from the British Indian Army who gained release from extreme conditions in POW camps by joining the Japanese-sponsored INA. It participated in Battle Of Kohima and Battle of Imphal. In postwar Indian politics, some Indians called them heroes.[citation needed].

The Congress Party in 1942 demanded immediate independence, which Britain rejected. Congress then demanded the British immediately "Quit India" in August 1942, but the Raj responded by immediately jailing tens of thousands of national, state and regional leaders; knocking Congress out of the war. Meanwhile, the Muslim League supported the war effort and gained membership and favors with colonial rulers, as well as British support for its demands for a separate Muslim state (which became Pakistan in 1947).

Hong Kong

Hong Kong was a British colony captured by Japan on December 25, 1941, after 18 days of fierce fighting. The conquest was swift, but was followed by days of large-scale looting; over ten thousand Chinese women were raped or gang-raped by the Japanese soldiers.[86] The population halved, from 1.6 million in 1941 to 750,000 at war's end because of fleeing refugees; they returned in 1945.[87]

The Japanese imprisoned the ruling British colonial elite and sought to win over the local merchant gentry by appointments to advisory councils and neighbourhood watch groups. The policy worked well for Japan and produced extensive collaboration from both the elite and the middle class, with far less terror than in other Chinese cities. Hong Kong was transformed into a Japanese colony, with Japanese businesses replacing the British. The Japanese Empire had severe logistical difficulties and by 1943 the food supply for Hong Kong was problematic.[88]

The overlords became more brutal and corrupt, and the Chinese gentry became disenchanted. With the surrender of Japan the transition back to British rule was smooth, for on the mainland the Nationalist and Communists forces were preparing for a civil war and ignored Hong Kong. In the long run the occupation strengthened the pre-war social and economic order among the Chinese business community by eliminating some conflicts of interests and reducing the prestige and power of the British.[89]

Axis

Germany

 
Propaganda poster aimed at the German home front: "Work for victory as hard as we fight for it!"

Germany had not fully mobilized in 1939, not even in 1941, as society continued in prewar channels.[90] Not until 1943, under Albert Speer (the minister of armaments in the Reich), did Germany finally redirect its entire economy and manpower to war production. Instead of using all available Germans, it brought in millions of slave workers from conquered countries, treating them badly (and getting low productivity in return).[91] Germany's economy was simply too small for a longer all-out war. Hitler's strategy was to change this by a series of surprise blitzkriegs. This failed with defeats in Russia in 1941 and 1942, and against the economic power of the allies.[92]

Forced labour

Instead of expanding the economies of the occupied nations, the Nazis seized the portable machinery and rail cars, requisitioned most of their industrial output, took large quantities of food (15% of French output), and forced the victims to pay for their military occupation.[93]

The Nazis forced 15 million people to work in Germany (including POWs); many died from bad living conditions, mistreatment, malnutrition, and executions. At its peak, forced laborers comprised 20% of the German work force and were a vital part of the German economic exploitation of the conquered territories. They were especially concentrated in munitions and agriculture.[94] For example, 1.5 million French soldiers were kept in POW camps in Germany as hostages and forced workers, and in 1943, 600,000 French civilians were forced to move to Germany to work in war plants.[95]

Economy

Although Germany had about double the population of Britain (80 million versus 46 million), it had to use far more labor to provide food and energy. Britain imported food and employed only a million people (5% of the labour force) on farms, while Germany used 11 million (27%). For Germany to build its twelve synthetic oil plants with a capacity of 3.3 million tons a year it required 2.3 million tons of structural steel and 7.5 million man-days of labor. (Britain imported all its oil from Iraq, Persia and North America). To overcome this problem, Germany employed millions of forced laborers and POWs; by 1944, they had brought in more than five million civilian workers and nearly two million prisoners of war—a total of 7.13 million foreign workers.

 
Teenage girls in agricultural work in the occupied territories, one of the possible duties assigned by the Bund Deutscher Mädel (League of Young German Women), the female version of the Hitler Youth, with compulsory membership for girls. The caption in Das Deutsche Mädel, in its May 1942 issue, states: "bringing all the enthusiasm and life force of their youth, our young daughters of the Work Service make their contribution in the German territories regained in the East".
 
Gertrud Scholtz-Klink, head of the women's wing of the Nazi Party as well as the Woman's Bureau in the German Labor Front

Rationing

Rationing in Germany was introduced in 1939 immediately upon the outbreak of hostilities. Hitler was at first convinced that it would affect public support for the war if a strict rationing program was introduced. The Nazis were popular partly because Germany was relatively prosperous, and Hitler did not want to lose popularity or public support. Hitler felt that food and other shortages had been a major factor in destroying civilian morale during World War I, leading to defeatism and surrender.

Despite the rationing, civilians had enough food and clothing; witness Howard K. Smith later wrote that "[f]or a people engaged in a life-and-death war ... the German people for two years of war ate amazingly well." The meat ration, for example, was 500 g per week per person. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, however, this changed to 400 g per week, then fell further. Estimating that the meat ration had dropped by up to 80% in five months of fighting in Russia, and citing many other sudden changes in living conditions, Smith wrote that by the time he left Germany in late 1941, "for the first time ... the German people are undernourished".[96] The system gave extra rations for men involved in heavy industry, and extremely low starvation rations for Jews and Poles in the areas occupied by Germany, but not to the Poles inside Germany, many of whom had been brought in to perform heavy labor in German war industries.

According to a 1997 post by Walter Felscher to the "Memories of the 1940s" electronic mailing list:

For every person, there were rationing cards for general foodstuffs, meats, fats (such as butter, margarine and oil) and tobacco products distributed every other month. The cards were printed on strong paper, containing numerous small "Marken" subdivisions printed with their value – for example, from "5 g Butter" to "100 g Butter". Every acquisition of rationed goods required an appropriate "Marken", and if a person wished to eat a certain soup at a restaurant, the waiter would take out a pair of scissors and cut off the required items to make the soup and amounts listed on the menu. In the evenings, restaurant-owners would spend an hour at least gluing the collected "Marken" onto large sheets of paper which they then had to hand in to the appropriate authorities.[97]

The rations were enough to live from, but clearly did not permit luxuries. Whipped cream was unknown from 1939 until 1948, as well as chocolates, cakes with rich creams etc. Meat could not be eaten every day. Other items were not rationed, but simply became unavailable as they had to be imported from overseas: coffee in particular, which throughout was replaced by substitutes made from roasted grains. Vegetables and local fruit were not rationed; imported citrus fruits and bananas were unavailable. In more rural areas, farmers continued to bring their products to the markets, as large cities depended on long distance delivery. Many people kept rabbits for their meat when it became scarce in shops, and it was often a child's job to care for them each day.

By spring 1945, food distribution and the ration system were increasingly in collapse, due to insurmountable transportation disruption and the rapid advance of the Allied armies from west and east with consequent loss of food storage facilities. In Berlin, at the start of the Battle of Berlin, the authorities announced a special supplementary food ration on April 20, 1945. It consisted of a pound (450 g) of bacon or sausage, half a pound of rice, half a pound of peas or pulses, a pound of sugar, four ounces (110 g) of coffee substitute, one ounce of real coffee, and a tin of vegetables or fruit. They also announced that standard food ration allocations for the next fortnight could be claimed in advance.[98] The extra allocation of rations were dubbed by Berliners Himmelfahrtsrationen, Ascension-day rations, "because with these rations we shall now ascend to heaven"[99]

Nursing

Germany had a very large and well organized nursing service, with three main organizations, one for Catholics, one for Protestants, and the DRK (Red Cross). In 1934 the Nazis set up their own nursing unit, the Brown nurses, which absorbed one of the smaller groups, bringing it up to 40,000 members. It set up kindergartens in competition with the other nursing organizations, hoping to seize control of the minds of the younger Germans. Civilian psychiatric nurses who were Nazi party members participated in the killing of invalids, although this was shrouded in euphemisms and denials.[100]

Military nursing was primarily handled by the DRK, which came under partial Nazi control. Frontline medical services were provided by male doctors and medics. Red Cross nurses served widely within the military medical services, staffing the hospitals that perforce were close to the front lines and at risk of bombing attacks. Two dozen were awarded the highly prestigious Iron Cross for heroism under fire. They are among the 470,000 German women who served with the military.[101]

Displaced persons

The conquest of Germany in 1945 freed 11 million foreigners, called "displaced persons" (DPs)- chiefly forced laborers and POWs. In addition to the POWs, the Germans seized 2.8 million Soviet workers to labor in factories in Germany. Returning them home was a high priority for the Allies. However, in the case of Russians and Ukrainians returning often meant suspicion or prison or even death. The UNRRA, Red Cross and military operations provided food, clothing, shelter and assistance in returning home. In all, 5.2 million were repatriated to the Soviet Union, 1.6 million to Poland, 1.5 million to France, and 900,000 to Italy, along with 300,000 to 400,000 each to Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, the Netherlands, Hungary, and Belgium.[102]

Refugees

In 1944–45, over 2.5 million ethnic Germans fled from Eastern Europe in family groups, desperately hoping to reach Germany before being overtaken by the Russians.[103][104] Half a million died in the process, the survivors were herded into refugee camps in East and West Germany for years. Meanwhile, Moscow encouraged its troops to regard German women as targets for revenge. Russian Marshal Georgi Zhukov called on his troops to, "Remember our brothers and sisters, our mothers and fathers, our wives and children tortured to death by Germans....We shall exact a brutal revenge for everything." Upwards of two million women inside Germany were raped in 1945 in a tidal wave of looting, burning and vengeance.[105]

Japan

 
Japanese schoolchildren evacuating to rural areas in 1944

The Japanese home front was elaborately organized, block by block, with full-scale food rationing and many controls over labor. The government used propaganda heavily and planned in minute detail regarding the mobilization of manpower, identification of critical choke points, food supplies, logistics, air raid shelters, and the evacuation of children and civilians from targeted cities. Food supplies were very tight before the heavy bombing began in fall 1944, then grew to a crisis. There was only a small increase of 1.4 million women entering the labor force between 1940 and 1944. Intense propaganda efforts by the government to promote savings and postpone consumer purchases were largely successful, especially on the part of housewives who generally controlled their family budget.[106] The minister of welfare announced, "In order to secure its labor force, the enemy is drafting women, but in Japan, out of consideration for the family system, we will not draft them."[107]

The weaknesses in the maximum utilization of womanpower was indicated by the presence of 600,000 domestic servants in wealthy families in 1944. The government wanted to raise the birthrate, even with 8.2 million men in the armed forces, of whom three million were killed. Government incentives helped to raise the marriage rate, but the number of births held steady at about 2.2 million per year, with a 10% decline in 1944–45, and another 15% decline in 1945–46. Strict rationing of milk led to smaller babies. There was little or no long-term impact on the overall demographic profile of Japan.[108]

The government began making evacuation plans in late 1943, and started removing entire schools from industrial cities to the countryside, where they were safe from bombing and had better access to food supplies. In all 1.3 million children were moved—with their teachers but not their parents.[109] When the American bombing began in earnest in late 1944, 10 million people fled the cities to the safety of the countryside, including two-thirds of the residents of the largest cities and 87% of the children. Left behind were the munitions workers and government officials. By April 1945, 87% of the younger children had been moved to the countryside.

Civil defense units were transformed into combat units, especially the Peoples Volunteer Combat Corps, enlisting civilian men up to the age of 60 and women to age 40. Starting in January 1945 the government operated an intensive training program to enable the entire civilian population to fight the "decisive battle" with the American invaders using grenades, explosive gliders and bamboo spears. Everyone understood they would probably die in what the government called, the "Grand Suicide of the One Hundred Million."[110] Health conditions became much worse after the surrender in September 1945, with so much housing stock destroyed, and an additional 6.6 million Japanese repatriated from Manchuria, China, Indochina, Formosa, Korea, Saipan and the Philippines.[111]

Civilian Sentiment and Government War Efforts

There was great civilian support for the war by July 1937.[112] The successful Japanese invasion of Manchuria in the early 1930s fueled the rise of aggressive foreign policy and radical nationalism. The Japanese shimbun's and radio station's reporting of the events helped spread this sentiment quickly. Understanding the benefits of educating the populace about the war efforts, the Japanese government soon followed suite. Starting in January 1938, ten minutes of war news was broadcast at 7:30 PM every day.[113]

At the start of the war, the Home Ministry of Japan established more campaigns to generate support for the war.[114] For instance, citizens were encouraged to avoid luxuries and save wealth for the state. The government even reformed its education system by rewriting ethics textbooks to be more nationalistic and militaristic. Schoolchildren were also taught nationalistic songs such as the Umi Yukaba:

"If I go away to the sea,
I shall be a corpse washed up.
If I go away to the mountain,
I shall be a corpse in the grass
But if I die for the Emperor,
It will not be a regret."

 
Civilians listening to the emperor's surrender broadcast, on August 15, 1945

In 1937, the Shinmin no michi (The Way of the Subjects) was given to all Japanese citizens in order to teach them how they should behave. Similarly, the Japanese war ministry issued the Senjinkun (Field Service Code) in 1941, which tried to educate the soldiers on how to behave during wartime. Specifically, the Senjinkun contained the famous ideal of no-surrender which inspired many Japanese servicemen to commit suicide than risk capture or surrender.[115] Observation of civilian wartime diaries and letters suggest that the government was successful in garnering massive support for the war. Despite the rationing that causes food shortages, many Japanese were happy to oblige. Sakamoto Kane, Kōchi housewife wrote: "For fish, the community council gave us a distribution of only shrimp and swordfish; we can't get either pork or beef. I have the feeling that little by little there will be shortages but that in war, we must aim for frugality even in small ways and we must be careful about waste–for the sake of the country."[116] Such sentiments were very common in Japan.

Further speaking to the success of the Japanese government, there were only ~1000 deserters every year for the six years of World War II. In comparison, ~40,000 Americans and more than 100,000 British servicemen deserted during World War II. While there was some resistance from the Japanese, most were supportive of the WW II efforts. In fact, many were prepared to fight against the invaders if the opportunity came. In some areas of Japan, women practiced fighting with bamboo spears; girls vowed to kill at least one invader before they died; children practiced throwing balls in anticipation that they would be throwing grenades at the enemy.[117] There were even reports of mass civilian suicides near the end of World War II, an attempt to avoid capture. This was partially due to loyalty for the emperor and fear tactics from the Japanese government, which had spread misinformation that the American soldiers would commit atrocities against innocent civilians.[118] For the other Japanese civilians, there was a general sense of sorrow at the time of Japan's surrender. Inoue Tarō, a Japanese teenager who was tasked with war work, wrote a statement in his diary at the announcement that Japan had surrendered: "Cry! Let's cry until we can't any longer. Later we'll probably see the outpouring of a new power."[119]

Number of Japanese Soldiers that Deserted or Defected[120]
Year 1939 1943 1944
Defectors 669 20 40
Deserters 669* 1023 1085

*669 is the combined number of deserters and defectors in 1939.

Food

Agricultural production in the home islands held up well during the war until the bombing started. It fell from an index of 110 in 1942 to 84 in 1944 and only 65 in 1945. Worse, imports dried up.[121] The Japanese food rationing system was effective throughout the war, and there were no serious incidences of malnutrition. A government survey in Tokyo showed that in 1944 families depended on the black market for 9% of their rice, 38% of their fish, and 69% of their vegetables.[122]

The Japanese domestic food supply depended upon imports, which were largely cut off by the American submarine and bombing campaigns. Likewise there was little deep sea fishing, so that the fish ration by 1941 was mostly squid harvested from coastal waters. The result was a growing food shortage, especially in the cities. There was some malnutrition but no reported starvation.[123] Despite government rationing of food, some families were forced to spend more than their monthly income could offer on black market food purchases. They would rely on savings or exchange food for clothes or other possessions.[124]

Japanese Rice Supply[125]
Year 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945
Domestic production 9,928 9,862 10,324 9,107 8,245 9,999 9,422 8,784 6,445
Imports 2,173 2,546 1,634 1,860 2,517 2,581 1,183 874 268
All rice 12,101 12,408 11,958 10,967 10,762 12,580 10,605 9,658 6,713

Deaths

The American aerial bombing of a total of 65 Japanese cities took from 400,000 to 600,000 civilian lives, with 100,000+ in Tokyo alone, over 200,000 in Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined. The Battle of Okinawa resulted in 80,000–150,000 civilian deaths. In addition civilian death among settlers who died attempting to return to Japan from Manchuria in the winter of 1945 were probably around 100,000. The total of Japanese military fatalities between 1937 and 1945 were 2.1 million; most came in the last year of the war and were caused by starvation or severe malnutrition in garrisons cut off from supplies.[126]

Japanese women

According to oral history studied by Thomas Havens, traditional paternalistic norms proved a barrier when the government wanted to exploit woman power more fully for the war effort. Compulsory employment in munitions factories was possible for unmarried women, but social norms prevented married women from doing that sort of work, in sharp contrast to Russia, Britain, Germany and the United States. The absence of so many young men dramatically disrupted long-standing patterns of marriage, fertility, and family life. Severe shortages of ordinary items, including food and housing, were far more oppressive than governmental propaganda efforts. Japanese women obediently followed orders, and there were no serious disruptions such as rioting over food shortages.[127] Forced prostitution for the benefit of Japanese soldiers created the "comfort women" program that proved highly embarrassing to Japan for decades after the war. Non-Japanese women from colonies such as Korea and Formosa were especially vulnerable.[128]

Beginning in the late 20th century cultural historians turned their attention to the role of women in wartime, especially the Second World War. Sources often used include magazines published—by men—for female readers. Typically fictional and nonfictional stories focused on social roles as mothers and wives, especially in dealing with hardships of housing and food supplies, and financial concerns in the absence of men at war. Problems of fashion wartime were a high priority in such magazines in all major countries.[129] Historians report that the Japanese textile and fashion industries were highly successful in adapting to wartime shortages and propaganda needs.[130] Magazines for teenage girls emphasized they must follow patriotic demands that compelled them to give up their adolescent freedoms and transform themselves from "shōjo", which connotes adolescent playfulness, into "gunkoku shōjo" [girls of a military nation], with significant home front responsibilities. Evacuation of women and children from the major cities, out of fear of Allied bombing, was covered in detail to emphasize willingness to sacrifice for patriotism portrayed through fiction, news articles and photographs.[131] The government controlled all the media, and supervised popular magazines so their content would strategically spread the government's goals and propaganda.[132]

Condition at war's end

Health and living conditions worsened after the surrender in September 1945. Most of the housing stock in large cities was destroyed, just as refugees tried to return from the rural areas. Adding to the crisis there was an influx of 3.5 million returning soldiers and 3.1 million Japanese civilians forcibly repatriated from Imperial outposts in Manchuria, China, Indochina, Formosa, Korea, Saipan and the Philippines; about 400,000 civilians were left behind and not heard of again. Meanwhile, 1.2 million Koreans, POWs and other non-Japanese left Japan. The government implemented pro-natalist policies, which led to an increase in the marriage rate, but birth rates remained steady until they declined by 10% in the stress of the last year of the war, and another 15% during the hardship of the postwar period.[133]

The American bombing campaign of all major cities severely impacted the economy, as did the shortages of oil and raw materials that intensified when Japanese merchant shipping was mostly sunk by American submarines. When industrial production was available to the military, for example, 24 percent of Japan's finished steel in 1937 was allocated to the military, compared to 85 percent in 1945.[134] By the end of the war, output percent of the highest capacity was still 100 percent for steel, although only 75 percent for aluminum, 63 percent for machine tools, 42 percent for vacuum tubes, 54 percent cement, 32 percent cotton fabric, and 36 percent for wool.[135]

Famines

Severe food shortages were common throughout the war zones, especially in Europe where Germany used starvation as a military weapon. Japan did not use it as a deliberate policy, but the breakdown of its transportation and distribution systems led to famine and starvation conditions among its soldiers on many Pacific islands.[136] Bose (1990) studies the three great Asian famines that took place during the war: Bengal in India, Honan in China, and Tonkin in Vietnam. In each famine at least two million people died. They all occurred in densely populated provinces where the subsistence foundations of agriculture was failing under the weight of demographic and market pressures. In each cases famine played a role in undermining the legitimacy of the state and the preexisting social structure.[137]

Housing

A great deal of housing was destroyed or largely damaged during the war, especially in the Soviet Union,[138] Germany, and Japan. In Japan, about a third of the families were homeless at the end of the war.[139] In Germany, about 25% of the total housing stock was destroyed or heavily damaged; in the main cities the proportion was about 45%.[140] Elsewhere in Europe, 22% of the prewar housing in Poland was totally destroyed; 21% in Greece; 9% in Austria, 8% in the Netherlands; 8% in France, 7% in Britain, 5% Italy and 4% in Hungary.[141]

See also

References

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  78. ^ Eli Daniel Potts and A. Potts, Yanks Down Under, 1941–1945: The American Impact on Australia (1986)
  79. ^ Walter Yust, Ten Eventful Years: 1937–1946 (1947) 3: 347–52
  80. ^ J. V. T. Baker War Economy (1965), the official history; and Nancy M. Taylor, The Home Front Volume I NZ official history (1986); Volume II
  81. ^ Deborah Montgomerie, "The Limitations of Wartime Change: Women War Workers in New Zealand," New Zealand Journal of History (1989) 23#1 pp 68–86
  82. ^ On the home front see Gwen Parsons, "The New Zealand Home Front during World War One and World War Two," History Compass (2013) 11#6 pp 419–428, online
  83. ^ "Making Britain: Second World War (1939–1945)", The Open University.
  84. ^ S. N. Sen, History: Modern India (2006) (online)
  85. ^ Paul R. Greenough, Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal: The Famine of 1943–1944 (1982)
  86. ^ Snow, Philip (2004). The Fall Of Hong Kong: Britain, China and the Japanese Occupation. Yale U.P. p. 81. ISBN 978-0300103731.
  87. ^ Jung-Fang Tsai, "Wartime Experience, Collective Memories and Hong Kong Identity, China Review International (2005) 12#1 pp 229+ online
  88. ^ Wei-Bin Zhang (2006). Hong Kong: The Pearl Made of British Mastery And Chinese Docile-Diligence. Nova Publishers. p. 109. ISBN 9781594546006.
  89. ^ Wei-Bin Zhang (2006). Hong Kong: The Pearl Made of British Mastery And Chinese Docile-Diligence. Nova Publishers. p. 109. ISBN 9781594546006.
  90. ^ Thomas Brodie, "German Society at War, 1939–45." Contemporary European History 27.3 (2018): 500-516 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0960777318000255
  91. ^ Richard Overy, War and Economy in the Third Reich (1994)
  92. ^ Adam Tooze, Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy (2006) pp. 429seq.
  93. ^ Edward L. Homze, Foreign Labor in Nazi Germany (1967)
  94. ^ Panikos Panayi, "Exploitation, Criminality, Resistance. The Everyday Life of Foreign Workers and Prisoners of War in the German Town of Osnabrück, 1939–49," Journal of Contemporary History Vol. 40, No. 3 (Jul., 2005), pp. 483–502 in JSTOR
  95. ^ Ulrich Herbert, "Forced Laborers in the 'Third Reich'", International Labor and Working-Class History (1997) . Archived from the original on April 15, 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
  96. ^ Smith, Howard K. (1942). Last Train from Berlin. Knopf. pp. 115–116, 120–131.
  97. ^ Felscher, Walter (1997-01-27). . Memories of the 1940s. Archived from the original on 1997-05-27. Retrieved 2006-09-28.[unreliable source?]
  98. ^ Read, Fisher, Anthony, David (1992). The Fall Of Berlin (Fifth ed.). London: Pimlico. p. 346. ISBN 978-0-7126-5797-6.
  99. ^ Ryan, Cornelius (2015). The Last Battle (2015 ed.). London: Hodder & Stouton. ISBN 978-1-473-62007-0.
  100. ^ Bronwyn Rebekah McFarland-Icke, Nurses in Nazi Germany (Princeton University Press, 1999)
  101. ^ Gordon Williamson, World War II German Women's Auxiliary Services (2003) pp 34–36
  102. ^ William I. Hitchcock, The Bitter Road to Freedom: The Human Cost of Allied Victory in World War II Europe (2008), pp 250–56
  103. ^ Michael R. Marrus, The Unwanted: European Refugees in the 20th Century (1985) ch 5
  104. ^ Richard Bessel, Germany: 1945 (2009)
  105. ^ Hitchcock, The Bitter Road to Freedom: (2008) pp 160–61; quote p. 161 online
  106. ^ Sheldon Garon, "Luxury is the enemy: Mobilizing savings and popularizing thrift in wartime Japan." Journal of Japanese Studies (2000) 26#1: 41-78 online.
  107. ^ Thomas Havens, Valley of Darkness: The Japanese People and World War Two (1978) p 108
  108. ^ Havens (1978), pp 135–37
  109. ^ Samuel Hideo Yamashita, Daily Life in Wartime Japan, 1940-1945 (2015) p 124
  110. ^ Yamashita, Daily Life in Wartime Japan, 1940-1945 (2015) p 172
  111. ^ Havens (1978), pp 145, 154 161–3, 167
  112. ^ Yamashita, Samuel Hideo (2015). Daily life in wartime Japan, 1940-1945. Lawrence, Kansas. p. 11. ISBN 9780700621903. OCLC 919202357.
  113. ^ Yamashita Samuel, Hideo (2017-02-19). Daily life in wartime japan, 1940 - 1945. p. 11. ISBN 9780700624621. OCLC 1023381472.
  114. ^ Tu Wei-ming, ed. (1997). Confucian traditions in East Asian modernity: moral education and economic culture in Japan and the four mini-dragons. Harvard University Press. pp. 147–153. ISBN 0674160878. OCLC 469805550.
  115. ^ Yamashita, Samuel Hideo (2015). Daily life in wartime Japan, 1940-1945. Lawrence, Kansas. ISBN 9780700621903. OCLC 919202357.
  116. ^ Kodera, Yukio (2005). Senji no nichijō: aru saibankan fujin no nikki. Tokyo: Hakubunkan. p. 119.
  117. ^ Yamashita Samuel, Hideo (2017-02-19). Daily life in wartime japan, 1940 - 1945. p. 172. ISBN 9780700624621. OCLC 1023381472.
  118. ^ "Ryukyu Shimpo, Ota Masahide, Mark Ealey and Alastair McLauchlan, Descent Into Hell: The Battle of Okinawa | The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus". apjjf.org. Retrieved 2019-03-18.
  119. ^ Inoue. Kindai. p. 109.
  120. ^ Dear, Ian; Foot, M. R. D. (1995). The Oxford companion to the Second World War. Oxford University Press. p. 297. ISBN 0192141686. OCLC 46240444.
  121. ^ Nakamura, Takafusa, et al. eds. Economic History of Japan 1914–1955: A Dual Structure (vol 3 2003), 326 – 32.
  122. ^ Havens, 125
  123. ^ Collingham. The Taste of War (2011) pp 228–47
  124. ^ ""Food Situation," November 2, 1945, Asahi, In Press Translations Japan, Social series, No. 1, Item 3, Pages 2-3, ATIS, G2, SCAP, November 5, 1945". Dartmouth Digital Library. 2 Nov 1945. Retrieved 26 Oct 2015.
  125. ^ Cohen, (1949) Japan's Economy in War and Reconstruction p 368-9
  126. ^ John Dower, "Lessons from Iwo Jima," Perspectives (September 2007) 45#6 pp 54–56 at [1]
  127. ^ Thomas Havens, "Women and war in Japan, 1937-45." The American Historical Review (1975): 913-934. online
  128. ^ Hirofumi Hayashi, "Disputes in Japan over the Japanese Military "Comfort Women" System and its perception in history." The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 617.1 (2008): 123-132.
  129. ^ Jacqueline M. Atkins, ed. Wearing Propaganda: Textiles on the Home Front in Japan, Britain, and the United States, 1931-1945 (Yale UP, 2005) .
  130. ^ John W. Dower, Ways of Forgetting, Ways of Remembering: Japan in the Modern World (2012) pp 65-104.
  131. ^ Kenneth Hewitt, "'When The Great Planes Came And Made Ashes Of Our City...': Towards An Oral Geography Of The Disasters Of War." Antipode 26.1 (1994): 1-34, online provides comparative experiences.
  132. ^ Anna Jackson, Review of "Wearing Propaganda: Textiles on the Home Front in Japan, Britain and the United States 1931-1945" Reviews in History Review Number: 548 (1 October 2006) Online 2019-11-28 at the Wayback Machine
  133. ^ Havens (1978)
  134. ^ Nakamura, Takafusa, et al. eds. Economic History of Japan 1914–1955: A Dual Structure (vol 3 2003), p 291
  135. ^ Nakamura, p 298
  136. ^ Collinham (2011)
  137. ^ Sugata Bose, "Starvation amidst Plenty: The Making of Famine in Bengal, Honan and Tonkin, 1942–45," Modern Asian Studies, July 1990, Vol. 24 Issue 4, pp 699–727 in JSTOR
  138. ^ One third of the Soviet housing stock was damaged or destroyed according to Jane R. Zavisca (2012). Housing the New Russia. Cornell UP. p. 29. ISBN 978-0801464775.
  139. ^ Niall Ferguson, "The Second World War as an Economic Disaster", in: Michael J. Oliver and Derek Howard Aldcroft, ed. (2007). Economic Disasters of the Twentieth Century. Edward Elgar. p. 83. ISBN 9781847205490.
  140. ^ Jeffry M. Diefendorf Professor and Chair of the History Department University of New Hampshire (1993). In the Wake of War: The Reconstruction of German Cities after World War II: The Reconstruction of German Cities after World War II. Oxford UP. pp. 126–27. ISBN 9780195361094.
  141. ^ W. S. Woytinsky and E. S. Woytinsky, World Population and Production: Trends and Outlook (1953) p 134, using 1949 UN estimates

Sources

  • ATIS, G2, SCAP. "Food Situation" 2 Nov 1945. Asahi, in Press Translations Japan, Social series No. 1, Item 3, pp. 2–3. Japanese newspaper translations
  • Baker, J. V. T. War Economy (1965)
  • Barber, John, and Mark Harrison. The Soviet Home Front: A Social and Economic History of the USSR in World War II, Longman, 1991.
  • Bessel, Richard. Germany: 1945 (2009)
  • Calder, Angus . (1969) The People's War: Britain 1939–45
  • Cohen, Jerome (1949). Japan's Economy in War and Reconstruction. University of Minnesota Press. online version.
  • Collingham, E. M. The Taste of War: World War Two and the Battle for Food (2011)
  • Davies, Norman (2004). Rising '44: The Battle for Warsaw. Viking. ISBN 0-670-03284-0.
  • Dear, I.C.B. and M. R. D. Foot, eds. The Oxford Companion to World War II (1995)
  • Diamond, Hanna. Women and the Second World War in France, 1939–1948: Choices and Constraints (1999)
  • Gross, Jan T. Polish Society under German Occupation: The Generalgouvernement, 1939–1944. Princeton UP, 1979.
  • Gutman, Israel (1994). Resistance: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-395-60199-0.
  • Hancock, W. K. and Gowing, M.M. (1949). British War Economy: History of the Second World War: United Kingdom Civil Series. London: HMSO and Longmans, Green & Co. Available on-line at: British War Economy.
  • Harris, Jose. "War and social history: Britain and the home front during the Second World War," Contemporary European History (1992) 1#1 pp 17–35.
  • Harrison, Mark (1988). "Resource Mobilization for World War II: The U.S.A., UK, USSR and Germany, 1938–1945". In: Economic History Review, (1988): pp 171–92.
  • Havens, Thomas R. Valley of Darkness: The Japanese People and World War II. 1978.
  • Hitchcock, William I. The Bitter Road to Freedom: The Human Cost of Allied Victory in World War II Europe (2009)
  • Jackson, Julian. France: The Dark Years, 1940–1944 (2003) 660pp online edition
  • Kedward, H. R. Occupied France: Collaboration and Resistance (Oxford UP, 1985)
  • Nakamura, Takafusa, et al. eds. Economic History of Japan 1914–1955: A Dual Structure (vol 3 2003)
  • Overy, Richard. War and Economy in the Third Reich Oxford UP, 1994.
  • Pierson, Ruth Roach. They're Still Women After All: The Second World War and Canadian Womanhood (McClelland and Stewart, 1986)
  • Postan, Michael (1952). British War Production: History of the Second World War: United Kingdom Civil Series. London: HMSO and Longmans, Green & Co. Available on-line at: British War Production.
  • Taylor, Nancy M. The Home Front Volume I NZ official history (1986); Volume II
  • Thurston, Robert W., and Bernd Bonwetsch, eds. The People's War: Responses to World War II in the Soviet Union (2000)
  • Titmuss, Richard M. (1950). Problems of Social Policy: History of the Second World War: United Kingdom Civil Series. London: HMSO and Longmans, Green & Co. Available on-line at: Problems of Social Policy.
  • Tooze, Adam. The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy (2008)
  • Yamashita, Samuel Hideo. Daily Life in Wartime Japan, 1940-1945 (2015).
  • Yust, Walter, ed. 10 Eventful Years: 1937–1946 4 vol. Encyclopædia Britannica, 1947.

Further reading

General

  • Beck, Earl R. The European Home Fronts, 1939–1945 Harlan Davidson, 1993, brief survey
  • Bohm-Duchen, Monica. Art and the Second World War (Princeton University Press; 2014) 288 pages; covers art produced in all the major belligerents
  • Costello, John. Love, Sex, and War: Changing Values, 1939–1945 1985. US title: Virtue under Fire: How World War II Changed Our Social and Sexual Attitudes
  • Geyer, Michael and Adam Tooze, eds. (2017) The Cambridge History of the Second World War: Volume 3, Total War: Economy, Society and Culture
  • Harrison, Mark, ed. The economics of World War II: six great powers in international comparison (Cambridge University Press, 2000). widely cited; covers all the major powers
  • Higonnet, Margaret R., et al., eds. Behind the Lines: Gender and the Two World Wars Yale UP, 1987.
  • Loyd, E. Lee, ed.; World War II in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, with General Sources: A Handbook of Literature and Research Greenwood Press. 1997. 525pp bibliographic guide
  • Loyd, E. Lee, ed.; World War II in Asia and the Pacific and the War's aftermath, with General Themes: A Handbook of Literature and Research Greenwood Press, 1998
  • Marwick, Arthur. War and Social Change in the Twentieth Century: A Comparative Study of Britain, France, Germany, Russia, and the United States 1974.
  • Mazower, Mark. Hitler's Empire: How the Nazis Ruled Europe (2009)
  • Milward, Alan. War, Economy and Society 1977 covers home front of major participants
  • Noakes, Jeremy ed., The Civilian in War: The Home Front in Europe, Japan and the U.S.A. in World War II Exeter, UK: University of Exeter, 1992.
  • Overy, Richard. The Bombers and the Bombed: Allied Air War Over Europe, 1940–1945 (Viking; 2014) 562 pages; covers the civil defence and the impact on the home fronts of Allied strategic bombing of Germany, Italy, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Bulgaria, and Scandinavia.
  • Toynbee, Arnold, ed. Survey Of International Affairs: Hitler's Europe 1939-1946 (1954) online; detailed coverage
  • Wright, Gordon. The Ordeal of Total War 1968., covers all of Europe
  • WWII Homefront – Collection of color photographs of the home front during World War II

British Empire

  • Jackson, Ashley. "The British Empire and the First World War"BBC History Magazine 9#11 (2008) online, short essay
  • Jackson, Ashley. The British Empire and the Second World War (2007); 604 pages; comprehensive coverage
  • Jackson, Ashley, Yasmin Khan, and Gajendra Singh, eds. An Imperial World at War: The British Empire, 1939–45 (2017) excerpt

Australia

  • Hasluck, Paul The Government and the People, 1939–41 (1965) online vol 1; The Government and the People, 1942–45 (1970) online vol 2
  • Butlin, S.J. War Economy, 1939–42 (1955) online
  • Butlin, S.J. and C.B. Schedvin, War Economy 1942–1945, (1977) online
  • Darian-Smith, Kate. On the Home Front: Melbourne in Wartime, 1939–1945. Australia: Oxford UP, 1990.
  • Saunders, Kay. War on the Homefront: State Intervention in Queensland, 1938–1948 (1993)

Canada

  • Bray, Bonita. "From Flag-Waving to Pragmatism: Images of Patriotism, Heroes and War in Canadian World War II Propaganda Posters." Material Culture Review/Revue de la culture matérielle (1995) 42#1 online
  • Broad, Graham. A Small Price to Pay: Consumer Culture on the Canadian Home Front, 1939–45 (2013)
  • Bruce, Jean. Back the attack!: Canadian women during the Second World War, at home and abroad (Macmillan of Canada, 1985)
  • Douglas, William Alexander Binny, and Brereton Greenhous, eds. Out of the shadows: Canada in the Second World War (Dundurn, 1995)
  • Durflinger, Serge. Fighting from Home: The Second World War in Verdun, Quebec (UBC Press, 2011)
  • Granatstein, J. L. Canada's War: The Politics of the Mackenzie King Government. Oxford UP, (1975).
  • Granatstein, J. L., and Desmond Morton. A Nation Forged in Fire: Canadians and the Second World War, 1939–1945 (1989).
  • Keshen, Jeffrey A. Saints, Sinners, and Soldiers: Canada's Second World War (2004)
  • Latta, Ruth. The Memory of All That: Canadian Women Remember World War II. (Burnstown, Ontario: The General Store Publishing House, 1992).
  • Perrun, Jody. The Patriotic Consensus: Unity, Morale, and the Second World War in Winnipeg (2014)

India

  • Khan, Yasmin. The Raj At War: A People's History Of India's Second World War (2015) a major, comprehensive scholarly study

New Zealand

  • Whitfeld, Frederick Lloyd. Political and External Affairs (1958) NZ official history
  • Hall, D. O. W. "Women at War," in Episodes & Studies Volume 1 (Historical Publications Branch, Wellington, New Zealand, 1948) pp 1–33 online
  • Parsons, Gwen. "The New Zealand Home Front during World War One and World War Two." History Compass 11.6 (2013): 419–428.

United Kingdom

  • Braybon, Gail, and Penny Summerfield. (1987) Out of the cage: women's experiences in two world wars
  • Calder, Angus. (1969) The People's War: Britain, 1939-1945; a standard scholarly survey. online review
  • Field, Geoffrey G. (2011) Blood, Sweat, and Toil: Remaking the British Working Class, 1939-1945 DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199604111.001.0001 online
  • Gardiner, Juliet. (2004) Wartime: Britain 1939–1945 782pp; comprehensive social history
  • Hancock, W. K. (1951) Statistical Digest of the War (official History of the Second World War). Online at: Statistical Digest of the War.
  • Harris, Carol (2000). Women at War 1939–1945: The Home Front. ISBN 0-7509-2536-1.
  • Marwick, Arthur (1976). The Home Front: The British and the Second World War; heavily illustrated .
  • Zweiniger-Bargielowska, Ina. Austerity in Britain: Rationing, Controls & Consumption, 1939–1955 (2000) 286p. online

China

  • Coble, Parks M. "China's 'New Remembering' of the Anti-Japanese War of Resistance, 1937–1945," The China Quarterly (2007), 190: 394–410.
  • Eastman, Lloyd. Seeds of Destruction: Nationalist China in War and Revolution, 1937–1945. Stanford University Press, 1984
  • Fairbank, John, and Albert Feuerwerker, eds., Republican China 1912–1949 in The Cambridge History of China, vol. 13, part 2. Cambridge University Press, 1986.
  • Guo Rugui, editor-in-chief Huang Yuzhang,China's Anti-Japanese War Combat Operations Jiangsu People's Publishing House, 2005
  • Hsiung, James C., and Steven I. Levine, eds. China's Bitter Victory: The War with Japan, 1937–1945 M. E. Sharpe, 1992
  • Hsi-sheng, Ch'i Nationalist China at War: Military Defeats and Political Collapse, 1937–1945 University of Michigan Press, 1982
  • Hsu, Long-hsuen and Chang, Ming-kai History of The Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945) 2nd Ed. Chung Wu Publishers.1972
  • Lary, Diana. The Chinese People at War: Human Suffering and Social Transformation, 1937–1945 (2010);

France

  • Fishman, Sarah, et al. France at War: Vichy and the Historians online 360 pp
  • Gildea, Robert (2002). Marianne in Chains: In Search of the German Occupation 1940–1945. London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-78230-9
  • Gordon, B., ed. Historical Dictionary of World War Two France: The Occupation, Vichy and the Resistance, 1938–1946 (1998)
  • Hall, W.-D. The Youth of Vichy France (Oxford, 1981).
  • articles, document & excerpts; extensive coverage edited by British scholar
  • Paxton, Robert O. Vichy France 1940–1944: Old Guard and New Order, 1940– 1944 (2nd ed. 2001)

Germany

  • Biddiscombe, Perry "Into the Maelstrom: German Women in Combat, 1944–45," War & Society (2011) 30:61–89
  • Brodie, Thomas. "German Society at War, 1939–45." Contemporary European History 27.3 (2018): 500-516

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0960777318000255

  • Burleigh, Michael. The Third Reich: A New History (2000)
  • Echternkamp, Jörg. ed. Germany and the Second World War Volume IX/I: German Wartime Society 1939–1945: Politicization, Disintegration, and the Struggle for Survival (2008)
  • Evans, Richard J. The Third Reich at War (2010)
  • Hagemann, Karen and Stefanie Schüler-Springorum; Home/Front: The Military, War, and Gender in Twentieth-Century Germany Berg, 2002
  • Hagemann, Karen. "Mobilizing Women for War: The History, Historiography, and Memory of German Women's War Service in the Two World Wars," Journal of Military History (2011) 75:1055–1093.
  • Kalder N. "The German War Economy". Review of Economic Studies 13 (1946): 33–52. in JSTOR
  • Klemperer, Victor. I Will Bear Witness 1942–1945: A Diary of the Nazi Years (2001), memoir by partly Jewish professor
  • Milward, Alan. The German Economy at War 1965.
  • Owings, Alison ed. Frauen: German Women Recall the Third Reich (1995); primary source
  • Speer, Albert. Inside the Third Reich: Memoirs 1970; primary source on the economy by a key decision-maker
  • Steinert, Marlis G. Hitler's war and the Germans: Public Mood and Attitude during the Second World War (1977).
  • Stephenson, Jill. Hitler's Home Front: Wurttemberg under the Nazis (2006).

Greece

  • Iatrides, John O., ed. Greece in the 1940s: A Nation In Crisis (1981)
  • Mazower, Mark. After the War Was Over: Reconstructing the Family, Nation and State in Greece, 1943–1960 (2000)
  • Sweet-Escott, Bickham. Greece: A Political and Economic Survey, 1939–1953 (1954)

Italy

  • Bosworth, R. J. B. Mussolini's Italy: Life Under the Fascist Dictatorship, 1915–1945 (2007)
  • De Grazia, Victoria. How Fascism Ruled Women: Italy, 1922–1945 (1993)
  • Tracy Koon, Believe, Obey, Fight: Political Socialization in Fascist Italy 1922–1943 (U North Carolina Press, 1985),
  • Morgan, D. Italian Fascism, 1919–1945 (1995).
  • Wilhelm, Maria de Blasio. The Other Italy: Italian Resistance in World War II. W. W. Norton, 1988. 272 pp.
  • Williams, Isobel. Allies and Italians under Occupation: Sicily and Southern Italy, 1943-45 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013). xiv + 308 pp. online review
  • Willson, Perry. "Empire, Gender and the 'Home Front' in Fascist Italy." Women's History Review 16#4 (2007): 487–500.

Japan

  • Cook, Haruko Taya, and Theodore Cook. Japan at War: An Oral History (1992), interviews.
  • Dower, John. Japan in War and Peace 1993.
  • Duus, Peter, Ramon H. Myers, and Mark R. Peattie. The Japanese Wartime Empire, 1931–1945. Princeton UP 1996. 375p.
  • Havens, Thomas R. "Women and War in Japan, 1937–1945." American Historical Review 80 (1975): 913–934. online in JSTOR
  • Perez, Louis G., ed. Japan at War: An Encyclopedia (2013) pp 477–98 excerpts and text search
  • Yoshimi, Yoshiaki. Grassroots Fascism: The War Experience of the Japanese People (Columbia UP, 2015). 360 pp. online review

Low Countries

  • Geller, Jay Howard. "The Role of Military Administration in German-occupied Belgium, 1940–1944," Journal of Military History, January 1999, Vol. 63 Issue 1, pp 99–125,
  • Sellin, Thorsten, ed. "The Netherlands during German Occupation," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol. 245, May 1946 pp i to 180 in JSTOR, 21 essays by experts
  • Van Der Wee, Herman, and Monique Verbreyt. A Small Nation in the Turmoil of the Second World War: Money, Finance and Occupation (2010), on Belgium
  • Warmbrunn, Werner. The Dutch under German Occupation 1940–1945 (Stanford U.P. 1963)
  • Wouters, Nico. "Municipal Government during the Occupation (1940–5): A Comparative Model of Belgium, the Netherlands and France," European History Quarterly, April 2006, Vol. 36 Issue 2, pp 221–246

Philippines

  • Agoncillo Teodoro A. The Fateful Years: Japan's Adventure in the Philippines, 1941–1945. Quezon City, PI: R.P. Garcia Publishing Co., 1965. 2 vols
  • Hartendorp A. V.H. The Japanese Occupation of the Philippines. Manila: Bookmark, 1967. 2 vols.
  • Lear, Elmer. The Japanese Occupation of the Philippines: Leyte, 1941–1945. Southeast Asia Program, Department of Far Eastern Studies, Cornell University, 1961. 246p. emphasis on social history
  • Steinberg, David J. Philippine Collaboration in World War II. University of Michigan Press, 1967. 235p.

Poland

  • Chodakiewicz, Marek Jan. Between Nazis and Soviets: Occupation Politics in Poland, 1939–1947 (Lexington Books, 2004)
  • Coutouvidi, John, and Jaime Reynold. Poland, 1939–1947 (1986)
  • Gross, Jan T. Revolution from Abroad: The Soviet Conquest of Poland's Western Ukraine and Western Belorussia (1988).
  • Kochanski, Halik. The Eagle Unbowed: Poland and the Poles in the Second World War (2012) excerpt and text search
  • Redlich, Shimon. Together and Apart in Brzezany: Poles, Jews, and Ukrainians, 1919–1945. Indiana U. Press, 2002. 202 pp.
  • Wrobel, Piotr. "The Devil's Playground: Poland in World War II' (The Canadian Foundation for Polish Studies of the Polish Institute of Arts & Sciences, online)
  • "Poland At War 1939–1945 Resources", English bibliography

Scandinavia

  • Andenaes, Johs, et al. Norway and the Second World War (ISBN 82-518-1777-3) Oslo: Johan Grundt Tanum Forlag, 1966.
  • Kinnunen, Tiina, and Ville Kivimäki. Finland in World War II: History, Memory, Interpretations (2011)
  • Nissen, Henrik S. Scandinavia During the Second World War (1983)
  • Salmon; Patrick, ed. Britain and Norway in the Second World War London: HMSO, 1995.

Soviet Union

  • Berkhoff, Karel C. Harvest of Despair: Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule. Harvard U. Press, 2004. 448 pp.
  • Berkhoff, Karel C. Motherland in Danger: Soviet Propaganda during World War II (2012) excerpt and text search covers both propaganda and reality of home front conditions
  • Braithwaite, Rodric. Moscow 1941: A City and Its People at War (2006)
  • Dallin, Alexander. Odessa, 1941–1944: A Case Study of Soviet Territory under Foreign Rule. Portland: Int. Specialized Book Service, 1998. 296 pp.
  • Kucherenko, Olga. Little Soldiers: How Soviet Children Went to War, 1941–1945 (2011) excerpt and text search
  • Overy, Richard. Russia's War: A History of the Soviet Effort: 1941–1945 (1998) 432pp excerpt and txt search
  • Vallin, Jacques; Meslé, France; Adamets, Serguei; and Pyrozhkov, Serhii. "A New Estimate of Ukrainian Population Losses During the Crises of the 1930s and 1940s." Population Studies (2002) 56(3): 249–264. in JSTOR Reports life expectancy at birth fell to a level as low as ten years for females and seven for males in 1933 and plateaued around 25 for females and 15 for males in the period 1941–44.

home, front, during, world, term, home, front, covers, activities, civilians, nation, world, total, homeland, military, production, became, even, more, invaluable, both, allied, axis, powers, life, home, front, during, world, significant, part, effort, partici. The term home front covers the activities of the civilians in a nation at war World War II was a total war homeland military production became even more invaluable to both the Allied and Axis powers Life on the home front during World War II was a significant part of the war effort for all participants and had a major impact on the outcome of the war Governments became involved with new issues such as rationing manpower allocation home defense evacuation in the face of air raids and response to occupation by an enemy power The morale and psychology of the people responded to leadership and propaganda Typically women were mobilized to an unprecedented degree INF3 160 Fighting Fit in the Factory British poster by A R Thomson All of the powers used lessons from their experiences on the home front during World War I Their success in mobilizing economic output was a major factor in supporting combat operations Among morale boosting activities that also benefited combat efforts the home front engaged in a variety of scrap drives for materials crucial to the war effort such as metal rubber and rags Such drives helped strengthen civilian morale and support for the war effort Each country tried to suppress negative or defeatist rumors Salvage Help put the lid on Hitler by saving your old metal and paper The major powers devoted 50 61 percent of their total GDP to munitions production The Allies produced about three times as much in munitions as the Axis powers Munitions Production in World War II Expenditures in billions of dollars US 1944 munitions prices Country Alliance YearAverage1935 39 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 Total1939 44U S A 0 3 1 5 4 5 20 0 38 0 42 0 106 3Britain 0 5 3 5 6 5 9 0 11 0 11 0 41 5U S S R 1 6 5 0 8 5 11 5 14 0 16 0 56 6Allies Total 2 4 10 0 20 0 41 5 64 5 70 5 204 4Germany 2 4 6 0 6 0 8 5 13 5 17 0 53 4Japan 0 4 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 5 6 0 16 9Axis Total 2 8 7 0 8 0 11 5 18 0 23 0 70 3Source Goldsmith data in Harrison 1988 p 172 Real Value Consumer Spending Country Year1937 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945Japan 100 107 109 111 108 99 93 78Germany 100 108 117 108 105 95 94 85USA 100 96 103 108 116 115 118 122Source Jerome B Cohen Japan s Economy in War and Reconstruction 1949 p 354 Contents 1 Allies 1 1 Belgium 1 2 China 1 3 France 1 3 1 War wives 1 3 2 Food shortages of the home front 1 4 Netherlands 1 5 Poland 1 5 1 Food deprivation as a Nazi weapon 1 5 2 Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto 1943 1 5 3 Warsaw Uprising of 1944 1 6 Soviet Union 1 6 1 Survival in Leningrad 1 7 United States 1 7 1 The Philippines 1 8 Britain and Commonwealth 1 8 1 Britain 1 8 1 1 Munitions 1 8 1 2 Rationing 1 8 1 3 Evacuation 1 8 1 4 Welfare state 1 8 1 5 Memory 1 8 2 Canada 1 8 2 1 Ethnic minorities from enemy countries 1 8 2 2 Women 1 8 3 Australia 1 8 4 New Zealand 1 8 5 India 1 8 6 Hong Kong 2 Axis 2 1 Germany 2 1 1 Forced labour 2 1 2 Economy 2 1 3 Rationing 2 1 4 Nursing 2 1 5 Displaced persons 2 1 6 Refugees 2 2 Japan 2 2 1 Civilian Sentiment and Government War Efforts 2 2 2 Food 2 2 3 Deaths 2 2 4 Japanese women 2 2 5 Condition at war s end 3 Famines 4 Housing 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Sources 7 Further reading 7 1 General 7 2 British Empire 7 2 1 Australia 7 2 2 Canada 7 2 3 India 7 2 4 New Zealand 7 2 5 United Kingdom 7 3 China 7 4 France 7 5 Germany 7 6 Greece 7 7 Italy 7 8 Japan 7 9 Low Countries 7 10 Philippines 7 11 Poland 7 12 Scandinavia 7 13 Soviet UnionAllies EditMain article Allies of World War II The Allies called themselves the United Nations even before that organization formed in 1945 and pledged their support to the Atlantic Charter of 1941 The Charter stated the ideal goals of the war no territorial aggrandizement no territorial changes made against the wishes of the people restoration of self government to those deprived of it free access to raw materials reduction of trade restrictions global cooperation to secure better economic and social conditions for all freedom from fear and want freedom of the seas and abandonment of the use of force as well as the disarmament of aggressor nations Belgium Edit Main article Belgium in World War II The sudden German invasion of neutral Belgium in May 1940 led in a matter of 18 days to the collapse of the Belgian army King Leopold obtained an armistice that involved direct German military administration The King refused the government s demand that he flee with them to Britain he remained as a puppet ruler under German control The Belgian bureaucracy remained in place and generally cooperated with the German rulers Two pro German movements the Flemish National Union comprising Flemish Dutch speaking separatists and the Walloon French speaking Rexists led by Leon Degrelle 1906 94 supported the invaders and encouraged their young men to volunteer for the German army 1 Small but active resistance movements largely Communist provided intelligence to the Allies During the Holocaust in Belgium the Nazis hunted down the 70 000 Jews living in Belgium most of them refugees and killed 29 000 of them 2 The Germans expected to exploit Belgium s industrial resources to support their war machine Their policies created severe shortages for the Belgian people but shipped out far less than Germany had expected They set up the Armaments Inspection Board in 1940 to relay munitions orders to factories the Board came under the control of the German Minister of Armaments Albert Speer in 1943 and had offices in industrial areas that were supposed to facilitate orders for materiel and supervise production However factory production fell sharply after 1942 Although collaboration with the Nazis especially among the Flemish was evident in 1940 it soon faded in importance Labor strikes and systematic sabotage slowed production as did the emigration of workers to rural areas Allied bombing food shortages and worker resentment of forced labor 3 The Allies retook all of Belgium in September 1944 as the Germans retreated They reappeared briefly during the hard fighting of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944 but were finally expelled in January 1945 The London based government in exile returned but had to confront the resistance movements that demanded radical political change 4 China Edit See also Second Sino Japanese War China suffered the second highest number of casualties of the entire war Civilians in the occupied territories had to endure many large scale massacres including that in Nanjing Jiangsu and Pingdingshan Liaoning citation needed In a few areas the Japanese army also unleashed newly developed biological weapons on Chinese civilians leading to an estimated 200 000 dead 5 Tens of thousands died when Kuomintang Nationalist troops broke the levees of the Yangtze to stop the Japanese advance after the loss of the Chinese capital Nanjing Millions more Chinese died because of famine during the war At the end of the war Japan was bombed with two atomic bombs and surrendered Japan had captured major coastal cities like Shanghai early in the war cutting the rest of China off from its chief sources of finance and industry Millions of Chinese moved to remote western regions to avoid invasion Cities like Kunming ballooned with new arrivals Entire factories and universities were relocated to safe areas so society could still function Japan replied with hundreds of air raids on the new capital Chongqing citation needed Although China received much aid from the United States China did not have sufficient infrastructure to properly arm or even feed its military forces let alone its civilians citation needed China was divided into three zones with the Nationalists led by Chiang Kai shek Chiang or Jiang the southwest and the Communists led by Mao Zedong Mao in control of much of the northwest Coastal areas were occupied by the Japanese and civilians were treated harshly citation needed some young men were drafted into the puppet Chinese army France Edit Main article Vichy FranceFurther information German occupation of France during World War II and Italian occupation of France during World War II After the stunningly quick defeat in June 1940 France was knocked out of the war part of it with its capital in Vichy became an informal ally of the Germans A powerful Resistance movement sprang up as the Germans fortified the coast against an Allied invasion and occupied the northern half of the country 6 The Germans captured 2 000 000 French soldiers and kept them as prisoners of war in camps inside of Germany for the duration of the war using them as hostages to guarantee French cooperation The Vichy French government cooperated closely with the Germans sending food machinery and workers to Germany Several hundred thousand Frenchmen and women were forced to work in German factories or volunteered to do so as the French economy itself deteriorated Nevertheless there was a strong Resistance movement with fierce anti resistance activities carried out by the Nazis and the French police Most Jews were rounded up by the Vichy police and handed over to the Germans who sent them to death camps 7 8 War wives Edit The two million French soldiers held as POWs and forced laborers in Germany throughout the war were not at risk of death in combat but the anxieties of separation for their 800 000 wives were high The government provided a modest allowance but one in ten became prostitutes to support their families 9 Meanwhile the Vichy regime promoted a highly traditional model of female roles 10 After the war France gave women the vote and additional legal and political rights although nothing on the scale of the enfranchisement that followed World War I Food shortages of the home front Edit Women suffered shortages of all varieties of consumer goods and the absence of the men in POW camps 11 The rationing system was stringent and very badly managed leading to pronounced malnourishment black markets and hostility to state management of the food supply The Germans seized about 20 of the French food production which caused severe disruption to the household economy of the French people 12 French farm production fell by half because of the lack of fuel fertilizer and workers even so the Germans seized half the meat and 20 of the produce 13 Supply problems quickly affected French stores which lacked most items The government responded by rationing but German officials set the policies and hunger prevailed especially affecting young people in urban areas In shops the queues lengthened Some people including German soldiers who could take advantage of arbitrary exchange rates that favored Germany benefited from the black market where food was sold without coupons at very high prices Farmers diverted meat to the black market so there was much less for the open market Counterfeit food coupons were also in circulation Direct buying from farmers in the countryside and barter against cigarettes became common These activities were strictly forbidden and carried the risk of confiscation and fines Food shortages were most acute in the large cities Vitamin deficiencies and malnutrition were prevalent 14 Advice about eating a healthier diet and home growing produce was distributed Slogans like Digging for Victory and Make Do and Mend appeared on national posters and became a part of the war effort The city environment made these efforts nearly negligible 15 In the more remote country villages however clandestine slaughtering vegetable gardens and the availability of milk products permitted survival The official ration provided starvation level diets of 1 300 or fewer calories a day 5400 kJ supplemented by home gardens and especially black market purchases 16 Netherlands Edit See also Dutch famine of 1944 The Dutch famine of 1944 known as the Hongerwinter Hunger winter was a man made famine imposed by Germany in the occupied western provinces during the winter of 1944 1945 A German blockade cut off food and fuel shipments from farm areas A total of 4 5 million people were affected of whom 18 000 died despite an elaborate system of emergency soup kitchens 17 Poland Edit Main articles Occupation of Poland 1939 1945 Polish culture during World War II and Polish Underground State Food deprivation as a Nazi weapon Edit The Nazi Hunger Plan was to kill the Jews of Poland quickly and slowly to force the Poles to leave by threat of starvation so that they could be replaced by German settlers The Nazis coerced Poles to work in Germany by providing favorable food rations for families who had members working in the Reich The ethnic German population in Poland Volksdeutsche were given good rations and were allowed to shop for food in special stores The German occupiers created a draconian system of food controls including severe penalties for the omnipresent black market There was a sharp increase in mortality due to the general malnutrition and a decline in birth rates 18 19 20 21 By mid 1941 the German minority in Poland received 2 613 calories 11 000 kJ per day while Poles received 699 and Jews in the ghetto 184 22 The Jewish ration fulfilled just 7 5 of their daily needs Polish rations only 26 Only the ration allocated to Germans provided the full required calorie intake 23 Distribution of food in Nazi occupied Poland as of December 1941 24 Nationality Daily Calorie intakeGermans 2 310Foreigners 1 790Ukrainians 930Poles 654Jews 184 54 clarification needed Additionally the Generalplan Ost of the Nazis which envisioned the elimination of the Slavic population in the occupied territories and artificial famines as proposed in the Hunger Plan were to be used clarification needed Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto 1943 Edit On September 1 1939 Germany invaded Poland conquering it in three weeks as the Soviets invaded the eastern areas During the German occupation there were two distinct civilian uprisings in Warsaw one in 1943 the other in 1944 The first took place in a zone less than two square miles 5 km2 in area which the Germans had carved out of the city and called Ghetto Warschau The Germans built high walls around the ghetto and crowded 550 000 Polish Jews into it many from the Polish provinces At first people were allowed to enter and leave the ghetto but soon its border became an iron curtain 25 Unless on official business Jews could not leave and non Jews including Germans could not enter Entry points were guarded by German soldiers Because of extreme conditions and hunger mortality in the ghetto was high In 1942 the Germans moved 400 000 ghetto residents to Treblinka where they were gassed on arrival By April 19 1943 when the Ghetto Uprising commenced the population of the ghetto had dwindled to 60 000 individuals In the following three weeks virtually all died as the Germans fought and systematically destroyed the buildings in the ghetto 26 Warsaw Uprising of 1944 Edit The uprising by Poles began on August 1 1944 when the Polish underground the Home Army aware that the Soviet Army had reached the eastern bank of the Vistula sought to liberate Warsaw much as the French resistance had liberated Paris a few weeks earlier Joseph Stalin had his own group of Communist leaders for the new Poland and did not want the Home Army or its leaders based in London to control Warsaw So he halted the Soviet offensive and gave the Germans free rein to suppress it During the ensuing 63 days 250 000 Poles of the Home Army surrendered to the Germans After the Germans forced all the surviving population to leave the city Hitler ordered that any buildings left standing be dynamited 98 percent of the buildings in Warsaw were destroyed 27 Soviet Union Edit 1941 Soviet poster Work in the rear as at the front every ton of bread coal oil steel hits the enemy During the invasion of the Soviet Union in the early months of the war rapid German advances almost captured the cities of Moscow and Leningrad The bulk of Soviet industry which could not be evacuated was either destroyed or lost due to German occupation Agricultural production was interrupted with grain crops left standing in the fields This caused hunger reminiscent of the early 1930s In one of the greatest feats of war logistics factories were evacuated on an enormous scale with 1 523 factories dismantled and shipped eastwards along four principal routes to the Caucasus Central Asia the Ural and Siberia 28 In general the tools dies and production technology were moved along with the blueprints and their management engineering staffs and skilled labor The whole of the Soviet Union became dedicated to the war effort The people of the Soviet Union were probably better prepared than any other nation involved in World War II to endure the material hardships of the war primarily because they were so used to shortages and economic crisis in the past especially during wartime World War I had brought similar restrictions on food 29 Conditions were nevertheless severe World War II was especially devastating to citizens of the USSR because it was fought on Soviet territory and caused massive destruction In Leningrad under German siege over a million people died of starvation and disease Many factory workers were teenagers women and old people 30 Propaganda in wartime Lviv the text reads Destroy the German monster The government implemented rationing in 1941 and first applied it to bread flour cereal pasta butter margarine vegetable oil meat fish sugar and confectionery all across the country The rations remained largely stable during the war Off ration food was often so expensive that it could not add substantially to a citizen s food supply unless they were especially well paid Peasants received no rations and had to make do with any local resources they farmed themselves Most rural peasants struggled and lived in unbearable poverty but others sold their surplus food at a high price a few became rouble millionaires until a currency reform two years after the end of the war wiped out their wealth 31 Despite harsh conditions the war led to a spike in Soviet nationalism and unity Soviet propaganda toned down extreme Communist rhetoric of the past as the people now rallied to protect their Motherland against the evils of the German invaders Ethnic minorities thought to be collaborators were forced into exile Religion which was previously shunned became a part of a Communist Party propaganda campaign to mobilize religious people 32 Soviet society changed drastically during the war There was a burst of marriages in June and July 1941 between people about to be separated by the war and in the next few years the marriage rate dropped off steeply with the birth rate following shortly thereafter to only about half of what it would have been in peacetime For this reason mothers with several children during the war received substantial honors and money benefits if they had several children mothers could earn around 1 300 rubles for having their fourth child and up to 5 000 rubles for their tenth 33 Survival in Leningrad Edit The city of Leningrad endured more suffering and hardships than any other city in the Soviet Union during World War II Hunger malnutrition disease starvation and even cannibalism became common during the siege which lasted from September 1941 until January 1944 Many people lost weight and grew weaker and more vulnerable to disease If malnutrition persisted for long enough its effects were irreversible People s feelings of loyalty disappeared if they got hungry enough they would steal from their closest family members in order to survive 34 Only some of the citizens of Leningrad survived Only 400 000 were evacuated before the siege began this left 4 5 million in Leningrad including 700 000 children Subsequently more managed to escape especially when the nearby Lake Ladoga froze over and people could walk over the ice road or road of life to safety 35 Those in influential political or social positions used their connections to other elites to leave Leningrad both before and after the siege began Some factory owners even looted state funds to secure transport out of the city during the first summer of the war 36 The most risky means of escape however was to defect to the enemy and hope to avoid governmental punishment Most survival strategies during the siege though involved staying within the city and facing the problems through resourcefulness or luck for instance by securing factory employment because many factories became autonomous and possessed more of the requirements for survival during the winter such as food and heat Workers received larger rations than other civilians and factories were likely to have electricity if they produced vital goods Factories also served as mutual support centers and had clinics and other services like cleaning crews and teams of women who would sew and repair clothes Factory employees were still driven to desperation on occasion and people resorted to eating glue or horsemeat in factories where food was scarce but factory employment was the most consistently successful method of survival and at some food production plants not a single person died 37 Survival opportunities open to the wider Soviet community included barter and farming on private land Black markets thrived as private barter and trade became more common especially between soldiers and civilians Soldiers who had more food to spare were eager to trade with civilians who had extra warm clothes to exchange Planting vegetable gardens in the spring became popular primarily because citizens could keep everything grown on their own plots The campaign also had a potent psychological effect and boosted morale a survival component almost as crucial as bread 38 Many of the most desperate Soviet citizens turned to crime to support themselves Most common was the theft of food and of ration cards this could prove fatal for a malnourished person if their card was stolen more than a day or two before a new card was issued For these reasons the stealing of food was severely punished and a person could be shot for as little as stealing a loaf of bread More serious crimes such as murder and cannibalism also occurred and special police squads were set up to combat these crimes though by the end of the siege roughly 1 500 had been arrested for cannibalism 39 A US Government publicity photo of American machine tool worker in Texas United States Edit Main articles United States home front during World War II and American propaganda during World War II In the United States farming and other production was increased For example citizens were encouraged to plant victory gardens personal farms that children sometimes worked on 40 Sociologist Alecea Standlee 2010 argues that during the war the traditional gender division of labor changed somewhat as the home or domestic female sphere expanded to include the home front meanwhile the public sphere the male domain was redefined as the international stage of military action 41 The Philippines Edit Main article History of the Philippines World War II and Japanese occupation The Philippines was an American possession on the way to independence scheduled in 1946 and controlled its own internal affairs The Japanese invaded and quickly conquered the islands in early 1942 The Japanese military authorities immediately began organizing a new government structure in the Philippines and established the Philippine Executive Commission They initially organized a Council of State through which they directed civil affairs until October 1943 when they declared the Philippines an independent republic The Japanese sponsored Second Philippine Republic headed by President Jose P Laurel proved to be ineffective and unpopular as Japan maintained very tight controls 42 Japanese occupation of the Philippines was opposed by large scale underground and guerrilla activity The Philippine Army as well as remnants of the U S Army Forces Far East continued to fight the Japanese in a guerrilla war They formed an auxiliary unit of the United States Army Their effectiveness was such that by the end of the war Japan controlled only twelve of the forty eight provinces One element of resistance in the Central Luzon area was furnished by the Hukbalahap which armed some 30 000 people and extended their control over much of Luzon 43 The Allies as well as the combined American and Filipino soldiers invaded in 1944 45 the battle for Manila was contested street by street with large numbers of civilians killed As in most occupied countries crime looting corruption and black markets were endemic 44 With a view of building up the economic base of the Greater East Asia Co Prosperity Sphere the Japanese Army envisioned using the islands as a source of agricultural products needed by its industry For example Japan had a surplus of sugar from Taiwan and a severe shortage of cotton so they try to grow cotton on sugar lands with disastrous results They lacked the seeds pesticides and technical skills to grow cotton Jobless farm workers flock to the cities where there was minimal relief and few jobs 45 The Japanese Army also tried using cane sugar for fuel castor beans and copra for oil derris for quinine cotton for uniforms and abaca hemp for rope The plans were very difficult to implement in the face of limited skills collapsed international markets bad weather and transportation shortages The program was a failure that gave very little help to Japanese industry and diverted resources needed for food production 46 As Karnow reports Filipinos rapidly learned as well that co prosperity meant servitude to Japan s economic requirements 47 Living conditions were bad throughout the Philippines during the war Transportation between the islands was difficult because of lack of fuel Food was in very short supply with sporadic famines and epidemic diseases 48 49 The Japanese tried to remove all Western and American cultural influences They met fierce resistance when they tried to undermine the Catholic Church by arresting 500 Christian missionaries The Filipinos came to feel morally superior to the brutal Japanese and rejected their advances 50 Newspapers and the media were tightly censored The Japanese tried to reshape schools and impose the Japanese language They formed neighborhood associations to inform on the opposition 51 Britain and Commonwealth Edit Conscription was the main means for raising forces in Britain and the dominions This was a reversal of policy from 1914 when too many men who were vitally needed on the home front volunteered for the military 52 Britain Edit Main articles United Kingdom home front during World War II and Timeline of the United Kingdom home front during World War IIFor the military history of Britain see Military history of the United Kingdom during World War II Britain s total mobilisation during this period proved to be successful in winning the war by maintaining strong support from public opinion The war was a people s war that enlarged democratic aspirations and produced promises of a postwar welfare state 53 54 Munitions Edit In mid 1940 the Royal Air Force RAF was called on to fight the Battle of Britain but suffered serious losses It lost 458 aircraft in France when more than current production and was hard pressed The government decided to concentrate on only five types of aircraft in order to optimise output They were Wellingtons Whitley Vs Blenheims Hurricanes and Spitfires These aircraft received extraordinary priority which covered the supply of materials and equipment and even made it possible to divert from other types the necessary parts equipment materials and manufacturing resources Labour was moved from other aircraft work to factories engaged on the specified types Cost was no object The delivery of new fighters rose from 256 in April to 467 in September more than enough to cover the losses and Fighter Command emerged triumphantly from the Battle of Britain in October with more aircraft than it had possessed at the beginning 55 Starting in 1941 the US provided munitions through Lend Lease that totalled 15 5 billion 56 Rationing Edit Main article Rationing in the United Kingdom Wartime food and cookery demonstrations 1940 A British Restaurant in London 1942 2000 were opened to serve low cost basic meals 57 Food clothing petrol leather and other items were rationed Perishable items such as fruit were not rationed Access to luxuries was severely restricted although there was also a significant black market Families also grew victory gardens and small home vegetable gardens Many goods were conserved to turn into weapons later such as fat for nitroglycerin production People in the countryside were less affected by rationing as they had greater access to locally sourced unrationed products than people in cities and were more able to grow their own The rationing system which was originally based on a specific basket of goods for each consumer was much improved by switching to a points system which allowed housewives to make choices based on their own priorities Food rationing also permitted the upgrading of the quality of the food available and housewives approved except for the absence of white bread and the government s imposition of an unpalatable wheat meal national loaf Surveys of public opinion showed that most Britons were pleased that rationing brought equality and a guarantee of a decent meal at an affordable cost 58 Evacuation Edit From very early in the war it was thought that the major industrial cities of Britain especially London would come under Luftwaffe air attack this did happen in The Blitz Some children were sent to Canada the US and Australia and millions of children and some mothers were evacuated from London and other major cities to safer parts of the country when the war began under government plans for the evacuation of civilians but they often filtered back When the Blitz bombing began on September 6 1940 they evacuated again The discovery of the poor health and hygiene of evacuees was a shock to many Britons and helped prepare the way for the Beveridge Report Children were evacuated if their parents agreed but in some cases they had no choice The children were only allowed to take a few things with them including a gas mask books money clothes ration book and some small toys 59 60 Welfare state Edit Main article Beveridge Report An Emergency Hospital Service was established at the beginning of the war in the expectation that it would be required to deal with large numbers of casualties A common theme called for an expansion of the welfare state as a reward to the people for their wartime sacrifices 61 This was set out in a famous report by William Beveridge It recommended that the various forms of assistance that had grown up piecemeal since 1911 be rationalised Unemployment benefits and sickness benefits were to be universal There would be new benefits for maternity The old age pension system would be revised and expanded and require that a person retired A full scale National Health Service would provide free medical care for everyone All the major political parties endorsed the principles and they were largely put into effect when peace returned 62 Memory Edit The themes of equality and sacrifice were dominant during the war and in the memory of the war Historian Jose Harris points out that the war was seen at the time and by a generation of writers as a period of outstanding national unity and social solidarity There was little antiwar sentiment during or after the war Furthermore Britain turned more toward the collective welfare state during the war expanding it in the late 1940s and reaching a broad consensus supporting it across party lines By the 1970s and 1980s however historians were exploring the subtle elements of continuing diversity and conflict in society during the war period 63 For example at first historians emphasized that strikes became illegal in July 1940 and no trade union called one during the war Later historians pointed to the many localised unofficial strikes especially in coal mining shipbuilding the metal trades and engineering with as many as 3 7 million man days lost in 1944 64 The BBC collected 47 000 wartime recollections and 15 000 images in 2003 6 and put them online 65 The CD audiobook Home Front 1939 45 also contains a selection of period interviews and actuality recordings 66 Canada Edit Main article Canada in the World Wars and Interwar Years World War II Two boys in Montreal gather rubber for wartime salvage 1942 Canada joined the war effort on September 10 1939 the government deliberately waited after Britain s decision to go to war partly to demonstrate its independence from Britain and partly to give the country extra time to import arms from the United States as a non belligerent 67 War production was ramped up quickly and was centrally managed through the Department of Munitions and Supply Unemployment faded away Canada became one of the largest trainers of pilots for the Allies through the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan Many Canadian men joined the war effort so with them overseas and industries pushing to increase production women took up positions to aid in the war effort The hiring of men in many positions in civilian employment was effectively banned later in the war through measures taken under the National Resources Mobilization Act Shipyards and repair facilities expanded dramatically as over a thousand warships and cargo vessels were built along with thousands of auxiliary craft small boats and others 68 Canada expanded food production but shipped so much to Britain that food rationing had to be imposed In 1942 it shipped to Britain 25 per cent of total meat production including 75 of the bacon 65 of the cheese and 13 of the eggs 69 Ethnic minorities from enemy countries Edit 20 of Canada s population were neither of British nor French origin and their status was of special concern The main goal was to integrate the marginalized European ethnicities in contrast to the First World War policy of internment camps for Ukrainians and Germans In the case of Germany Italy and especially Japan the government watched minorities closely for signs of loyalty to their homelands The fears proved groundless 70 In February 1942 21 000 Japanese Canadians were rounded up and sent to internment camps that closely resembled similar camps in the US because the two governments had agreed in 1941 to coordinate their evacuation policies 71 Most had lived in British Columbia but in 1945 they were released from detention and allowed to move anywhere in Canada except British Columbia or they could go to Japan Most went to the Toronto area 72 73 Women Edit Shop stewards in the canteen of the Burrard Dry Dock in North Vancouver British Columbia Canada Commencing in 1942 Burrard Dry Dock hired over 1000 women all of whom were dismissed at the end of the war to make way for returning men Canadian women responded to urgent appeals to make do recycle and salvage in order to come up with needed supplies They saved fats and grease gathered recycled goods handed out information on the best ways to get the most out of recycled goods and organized many other events to decrease the amount of waste Volunteer organizations led by women also prepared packages for the military overseas and for prisoners of war in Axis countries With World War II came a dire need for employees in the workplace Without women to step in the economy would have collapsed By autumn 1944 there were twice as many women working full time in Canada s paid labour force as in 1939 between 1 0 and 1 2 million and this did not include part time workers or women working on farms 74 Women had to take on this intensive labour and still find time to make jam clothes and undertake other acts of volunteering to aid the men overseas Australia Edit Main article Australian home front during World War II The government greatly expanded its powers in order to better direct the war effort and Australia s industrial and human resources were focused on supporting the Australian and American armed forces Australian women were encouraged to contribute to the war effort by joining one of the female branches of the armed forces or participating in the labour force Australia entered the war in 1939 and sent its forces to fight the Germans in the Middle East where they were successful and Singapore where they were captured by the Japanese in 1942 By 1943 37 of the Australian GDP was directed at the war effort Total war expenditure came to 2 949 million between 1939 and 1945 75 The Curtin Labor Government took over in October 1941 and energised the war effort with rationing of scarce fuel clothing and some food When Japan entered the war in December 1941 the danger was at hand and all women and children were evacuated from Darwin and northern Australia The Commonwealth Government took control of all income taxation in 1942 which gave it extensive new powers and greatly reduced the states financial autonomy 76 Manufacturing grew rapidly with the assembly of high performance guns and aircraft a specialty The number of women working in factories rose from 171 000 to 286 000 77 The arrival of tens of thousands of Americans was greeted with relief as they could protect Australia where Britain could not The US sent in 1 1 billion in Lend Lease and Australia returned about the same total in services food rents and supplies to the Americans 78 Three major incidents that took place on Australian territory were the Bombing of Darwin the attack on Sydney Harbour and the Cowra breakout New Zealand Edit See also Pacific Islands home front during World War II New Zealand with a population of 1 7 million including 99 000 Maori was highly mobilised during the war The Labour party was in power and promoted unionisation and the welfare state The armed forces peaked at 157 000 in September 1942 135 000 served abroad and 10 100 died Agriculture expanded sending record supplies of meat butter and wool to Britain When American forces arrived they were fed as well The nation spent 574 million on the war of which 43 came from taxes 41 from loans and 16 from American Lend Lease It was an era of prosperity as the national income soared from 158 million in 1937 to 292 million in 1944 Rationing and price controls kept inflation to only 14 during 1939 45 79 80 Montgomerie shows that the war dramatically increased the roles of women especially married women in the labour force Most of them took traditional female jobs Some replaced men but the changes here were temporary and reversed in 1945 After the war women left traditional male occupations and many women gave up paid employment to return home There was no radical change in gender roles but the war intensified occupational trends under way since the 1920s 81 82 India Edit Main article India in World War II During World War II India was a colony of Britain known as British Raj Britain declared war on behalf of India without consulting with Indian leaders 83 This resulted in resignation of Congress Ministries 84 The British recruited some 2 5 million Indians who played major roles as soldiers in the Middle East North Africa and Burma in the British Indian Army India became the main base for British operations against Japan and for American efforts to support China In Bengal with an elected Muslim local government under British supervision the cutoff of rice imports from Burma led to severe food shortages made worse by maladministration Prices soared and millions starved because they could not buy food In the Bengal famine of 1943 three million people died 85 An anti British force of about 40 000 men and a few women the Indian National Army INA under Subhas Chandra Bose formed in Southeast Asia It was under Japanese army control and performed poorly in combat Its members were captured Indian soldiers from the British Indian Army who gained release from extreme conditions in POW camps by joining the Japanese sponsored INA It participated in Battle Of Kohima and Battle of Imphal In postwar Indian politics some Indians called them heroes citation needed The Congress Party in 1942 demanded immediate independence which Britain rejected Congress then demanded the British immediately Quit India in August 1942 but the Raj responded by immediately jailing tens of thousands of national state and regional leaders knocking Congress out of the war Meanwhile the Muslim League supported the war effort and gained membership and favors with colonial rulers as well as British support for its demands for a separate Muslim state which became Pakistan in 1947 Hong Kong Edit Hong Kong was a British colony captured by Japan on December 25 1941 after 18 days of fierce fighting The conquest was swift but was followed by days of large scale looting over ten thousand Chinese women were raped or gang raped by the Japanese soldiers 86 The population halved from 1 6 million in 1941 to 750 000 at war s end because of fleeing refugees they returned in 1945 87 The Japanese imprisoned the ruling British colonial elite and sought to win over the local merchant gentry by appointments to advisory councils and neighbourhood watch groups The policy worked well for Japan and produced extensive collaboration from both the elite and the middle class with far less terror than in other Chinese cities Hong Kong was transformed into a Japanese colony with Japanese businesses replacing the British The Japanese Empire had severe logistical difficulties and by 1943 the food supply for Hong Kong was problematic 88 The overlords became more brutal and corrupt and the Chinese gentry became disenchanted With the surrender of Japan the transition back to British rule was smooth for on the mainland the Nationalist and Communists forces were preparing for a civil war and ignored Hong Kong In the long run the occupation strengthened the pre war social and economic order among the Chinese business community by eliminating some conflicts of interests and reducing the prestige and power of the British 89 Axis EditGermany Edit Propaganda poster aimed at the German home front Work for victory as hard as we fight for it Germany had not fully mobilized in 1939 not even in 1941 as society continued in prewar channels 90 Not until 1943 under Albert Speer the minister of armaments in the Reich did Germany finally redirect its entire economy and manpower to war production Instead of using all available Germans it brought in millions of slave workers from conquered countries treating them badly and getting low productivity in return 91 Germany s economy was simply too small for a longer all out war Hitler s strategy was to change this by a series of surprise blitzkriegs This failed with defeats in Russia in 1941 and 1942 and against the economic power of the allies 92 Forced labour Edit Main article Forced labour under German rule during World War II Instead of expanding the economies of the occupied nations the Nazis seized the portable machinery and rail cars requisitioned most of their industrial output took large quantities of food 15 of French output and forced the victims to pay for their military occupation 93 The Nazis forced 15 million people to work in Germany including POWs many died from bad living conditions mistreatment malnutrition and executions At its peak forced laborers comprised 20 of the German work force and were a vital part of the German economic exploitation of the conquered territories They were especially concentrated in munitions and agriculture 94 For example 1 5 million French soldiers were kept in POW camps in Germany as hostages and forced workers and in 1943 600 000 French civilians were forced to move to Germany to work in war plants 95 Economy Edit Although Germany had about double the population of Britain 80 million versus 46 million it had to use far more labor to provide food and energy Britain imported food and employed only a million people 5 of the labour force on farms while Germany used 11 million 27 For Germany to build its twelve synthetic oil plants with a capacity of 3 3 million tons a year it required 2 3 million tons of structural steel and 7 5 million man days of labor Britain imported all its oil from Iraq Persia and North America To overcome this problem Germany employed millions of forced laborers and POWs by 1944 they had brought in more than five million civilian workers and nearly two million prisoners of war a total of 7 13 million foreign workers Teenage girls in agricultural work in the occupied territories one of the possible duties assigned by the Bund Deutscher Madel League of Young German Women the female version of the Hitler Youth with compulsory membership for girls The caption in Das Deutsche Madel in its May 1942 issue states bringing all the enthusiasm and life force of their youth our young daughters of the Work Service make their contribution in the German territories regained in the East Gertrud Scholtz Klink head of the women s wing of the Nazi Party as well as the Woman s Bureau in the German Labor Front Rationing Edit Rationing in Germany was introduced in 1939 immediately upon the outbreak of hostilities Hitler was at first convinced that it would affect public support for the war if a strict rationing program was introduced The Nazis were popular partly because Germany was relatively prosperous and Hitler did not want to lose popularity or public support Hitler felt that food and other shortages had been a major factor in destroying civilian morale during World War I leading to defeatism and surrender Despite the rationing civilians had enough food and clothing witness Howard K Smith later wrote that f or a people engaged in a life and death war the German people for two years of war ate amazingly well The meat ration for example was 500 g per week per person After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941 however this changed to 400 g per week then fell further Estimating that the meat ration had dropped by up to 80 in five months of fighting in Russia and citing many other sudden changes in living conditions Smith wrote that by the time he left Germany in late 1941 for the first time the German people are undernourished 96 The system gave extra rations for men involved in heavy industry and extremely low starvation rations for Jews and Poles in the areas occupied by Germany but not to the Poles inside Germany many of whom had been brought in to perform heavy labor in German war industries According to a 1997 post by Walter Felscher to the Memories of the 1940s electronic mailing list For every person there were rationing cards for general foodstuffs meats fats such as butter margarine and oil and tobacco products distributed every other month The cards were printed on strong paper containing numerous small Marken subdivisions printed with their value for example from 5 g Butter to 100 g Butter Every acquisition of rationed goods required an appropriate Marken and if a person wished to eat a certain soup at a restaurant the waiter would take out a pair of scissors and cut off the required items to make the soup and amounts listed on the menu In the evenings restaurant owners would spend an hour at least gluing the collected Marken onto large sheets of paper which they then had to hand in to the appropriate authorities 97 The rations were enough to live from but clearly did not permit luxuries Whipped cream was unknown from 1939 until 1948 as well as chocolates cakes with rich creams etc Meat could not be eaten every day Other items were not rationed but simply became unavailable as they had to be imported from overseas coffee in particular which throughout was replaced by substitutes made from roasted grains Vegetables and local fruit were not rationed imported citrus fruits and bananas were unavailable In more rural areas farmers continued to bring their products to the markets as large cities depended on long distance delivery Many people kept rabbits for their meat when it became scarce in shops and it was often a child s job to care for them each day By spring 1945 food distribution and the ration system were increasingly in collapse due to insurmountable transportation disruption and the rapid advance of the Allied armies from west and east with consequent loss of food storage facilities In Berlin at the start of the Battle of Berlin the authorities announced a special supplementary food ration on April 20 1945 It consisted of a pound 450 g of bacon or sausage half a pound of rice half a pound of peas or pulses a pound of sugar four ounces 110 g of coffee substitute one ounce of real coffee and a tin of vegetables or fruit They also announced that standard food ration allocations for the next fortnight could be claimed in advance 98 The extra allocation of rations were dubbed by Berliners Himmelfahrtsrationen Ascension day rations because with these rations we shall now ascend to heaven 99 Nursing Edit Germany had a very large and well organized nursing service with three main organizations one for Catholics one for Protestants and the DRK Red Cross In 1934 the Nazis set up their own nursing unit the Brown nurses which absorbed one of the smaller groups bringing it up to 40 000 members It set up kindergartens in competition with the other nursing organizations hoping to seize control of the minds of the younger Germans Civilian psychiatric nurses who were Nazi party members participated in the killing of invalids although this was shrouded in euphemisms and denials 100 Military nursing was primarily handled by the DRK which came under partial Nazi control Frontline medical services were provided by male doctors and medics Red Cross nurses served widely within the military medical services staffing the hospitals that perforce were close to the front lines and at risk of bombing attacks Two dozen were awarded the highly prestigious Iron Cross for heroism under fire They are among the 470 000 German women who served with the military 101 Displaced persons Edit The conquest of Germany in 1945 freed 11 million foreigners called displaced persons DPs chiefly forced laborers and POWs In addition to the POWs the Germans seized 2 8 million Soviet workers to labor in factories in Germany Returning them home was a high priority for the Allies However in the case of Russians and Ukrainians returning often meant suspicion or prison or even death The UNRRA Red Cross and military operations provided food clothing shelter and assistance in returning home In all 5 2 million were repatriated to the Soviet Union 1 6 million to Poland 1 5 million to France and 900 000 to Italy along with 300 000 to 400 000 each to Yugoslavia Czechoslovakia the Netherlands Hungary and Belgium 102 Refugees Edit In 1944 45 over 2 5 million ethnic Germans fled from Eastern Europe in family groups desperately hoping to reach Germany before being overtaken by the Russians 103 104 Half a million died in the process the survivors were herded into refugee camps in East and West Germany for years Meanwhile Moscow encouraged its troops to regard German women as targets for revenge Russian Marshal Georgi Zhukov called on his troops to Remember our brothers and sisters our mothers and fathers our wives and children tortured to death by Germans We shall exact a brutal revenge for everything Upwards of two million women inside Germany were raped in 1945 in a tidal wave of looting burning and vengeance 105 Japan Edit Main article Shōwa 1926 1989 Second World War Japanese schoolchildren evacuating to rural areas in 1944The Japanese home front was elaborately organized block by block with full scale food rationing and many controls over labor The government used propaganda heavily and planned in minute detail regarding the mobilization of manpower identification of critical choke points food supplies logistics air raid shelters and the evacuation of children and civilians from targeted cities Food supplies were very tight before the heavy bombing began in fall 1944 then grew to a crisis There was only a small increase of 1 4 million women entering the labor force between 1940 and 1944 Intense propaganda efforts by the government to promote savings and postpone consumer purchases were largely successful especially on the part of housewives who generally controlled their family budget 106 The minister of welfare announced In order to secure its labor force the enemy is drafting women but in Japan out of consideration for the family system we will not draft them 107 The weaknesses in the maximum utilization of womanpower was indicated by the presence of 600 000 domestic servants in wealthy families in 1944 The government wanted to raise the birthrate even with 8 2 million men in the armed forces of whom three million were killed Government incentives helped to raise the marriage rate but the number of births held steady at about 2 2 million per year with a 10 decline in 1944 45 and another 15 decline in 1945 46 Strict rationing of milk led to smaller babies There was little or no long term impact on the overall demographic profile of Japan 108 The government began making evacuation plans in late 1943 and started removing entire schools from industrial cities to the countryside where they were safe from bombing and had better access to food supplies In all 1 3 million children were moved with their teachers but not their parents 109 When the American bombing began in earnest in late 1944 10 million people fled the cities to the safety of the countryside including two thirds of the residents of the largest cities and 87 of the children Left behind were the munitions workers and government officials By April 1945 87 of the younger children had been moved to the countryside Civil defense units were transformed into combat units especially the Peoples Volunteer Combat Corps enlisting civilian men up to the age of 60 and women to age 40 Starting in January 1945 the government operated an intensive training program to enable the entire civilian population to fight the decisive battle with the American invaders using grenades explosive gliders and bamboo spears Everyone understood they would probably die in what the government called the Grand Suicide of the One Hundred Million 110 Health conditions became much worse after the surrender in September 1945 with so much housing stock destroyed and an additional 6 6 million Japanese repatriated from Manchuria China Indochina Formosa Korea Saipan and the Philippines 111 Civilian Sentiment and Government War Efforts Edit There was great civilian support for the war by July 1937 112 The successful Japanese invasion of Manchuria in the early 1930s fueled the rise of aggressive foreign policy and radical nationalism The Japanese shimbun s and radio station s reporting of the events helped spread this sentiment quickly Understanding the benefits of educating the populace about the war efforts the Japanese government soon followed suite Starting in January 1938 ten minutes of war news was broadcast at 7 30 PM every day 113 At the start of the war the Home Ministry of Japan established more campaigns to generate support for the war 114 For instance citizens were encouraged to avoid luxuries and save wealth for the state The government even reformed its education system by rewriting ethics textbooks to be more nationalistic and militaristic Schoolchildren were also taught nationalistic songs such as the Umi Yukaba If I go away to the sea I shall be a corpse washed up If I go away to the mountain I shall be a corpse in the grassBut if I die for the Emperor It will not be a regret Civilians listening to the emperor s surrender broadcast on August 15 1945In 1937 the Shinmin no michi The Way of the Subjects was given to all Japanese citizens in order to teach them how they should behave Similarly the Japanese war ministry issued the Senjinkun Field Service Code in 1941 which tried to educate the soldiers on how to behave during wartime Specifically the Senjinkun contained the famous ideal of no surrender which inspired many Japanese servicemen to commit suicide than risk capture or surrender 115 Observation of civilian wartime diaries and letters suggest that the government was successful in garnering massive support for the war Despite the rationing that causes food shortages many Japanese were happy to oblige Sakamoto Kane Kōchi housewife wrote For fish the community council gave us a distribution of only shrimp and swordfish we can t get either pork or beef I have the feeling that little by little there will be shortages but that in war we must aim for frugality even in small ways and we must be careful about waste for the sake of the country 116 Such sentiments were very common in Japan Further speaking to the success of the Japanese government there were only 1000 deserters every year for the six years of World War II In comparison 40 000 Americans and more than 100 000 British servicemen deserted during World War II While there was some resistance from the Japanese most were supportive of the WW II efforts In fact many were prepared to fight against the invaders if the opportunity came In some areas of Japan women practiced fighting with bamboo spears girls vowed to kill at least one invader before they died children practiced throwing balls in anticipation that they would be throwing grenades at the enemy 117 There were even reports of mass civilian suicides near the end of World War II an attempt to avoid capture This was partially due to loyalty for the emperor and fear tactics from the Japanese government which had spread misinformation that the American soldiers would commit atrocities against innocent civilians 118 For the other Japanese civilians there was a general sense of sorrow at the time of Japan s surrender Inoue Tarō a Japanese teenager who was tasked with war work wrote a statement in his diary at the announcement that Japan had surrendered Cry Let s cry until we can t any longer Later we ll probably see the outpouring of a new power 119 Number of Japanese Soldiers that Deserted or Defected 120 Year 1939 1943 1944Defectors 669 20 40Deserters 669 1023 1085 669 is the combined number of deserters and defectors in 1939 Food Edit Agricultural production in the home islands held up well during the war until the bombing started It fell from an index of 110 in 1942 to 84 in 1944 and only 65 in 1945 Worse imports dried up 121 The Japanese food rationing system was effective throughout the war and there were no serious incidences of malnutrition A government survey in Tokyo showed that in 1944 families depended on the black market for 9 of their rice 38 of their fish and 69 of their vegetables 122 The Japanese domestic food supply depended upon imports which were largely cut off by the American submarine and bombing campaigns Likewise there was little deep sea fishing so that the fish ration by 1941 was mostly squid harvested from coastal waters The result was a growing food shortage especially in the cities There was some malnutrition but no reported starvation 123 Despite government rationing of food some families were forced to spend more than their monthly income could offer on black market food purchases They would rely on savings or exchange food for clothes or other possessions 124 Japanese Rice Supply 125 Year 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945Domestic production 9 928 9 862 10 324 9 107 8 245 9 999 9 422 8 784 6 445Imports 2 173 2 546 1 634 1 860 2 517 2 581 1 183 874 268All rice 12 101 12 408 11 958 10 967 10 762 12 580 10 605 9 658 6 713Deaths Edit The American aerial bombing of a total of 65 Japanese cities took from 400 000 to 600 000 civilian lives with 100 000 in Tokyo alone over 200 000 in Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined The Battle of Okinawa resulted in 80 000 150 000 civilian deaths In addition civilian death among settlers who died attempting to return to Japan from Manchuria in the winter of 1945 were probably around 100 000 The total of Japanese military fatalities between 1937 and 1945 were 2 1 million most came in the last year of the war and were caused by starvation or severe malnutrition in garrisons cut off from supplies 126 Japanese women Edit According to oral history studied by Thomas Havens traditional paternalistic norms proved a barrier when the government wanted to exploit woman power more fully for the war effort Compulsory employment in munitions factories was possible for unmarried women but social norms prevented married women from doing that sort of work in sharp contrast to Russia Britain Germany and the United States The absence of so many young men dramatically disrupted long standing patterns of marriage fertility and family life Severe shortages of ordinary items including food and housing were far more oppressive than governmental propaganda efforts Japanese women obediently followed orders and there were no serious disruptions such as rioting over food shortages 127 Forced prostitution for the benefit of Japanese soldiers created the comfort women program that proved highly embarrassing to Japan for decades after the war Non Japanese women from colonies such as Korea and Formosa were especially vulnerable 128 Beginning in the late 20th century cultural historians turned their attention to the role of women in wartime especially the Second World War Sources often used include magazines published by men for female readers Typically fictional and nonfictional stories focused on social roles as mothers and wives especially in dealing with hardships of housing and food supplies and financial concerns in the absence of men at war Problems of fashion wartime were a high priority in such magazines in all major countries 129 Historians report that the Japanese textile and fashion industries were highly successful in adapting to wartime shortages and propaganda needs 130 Magazines for teenage girls emphasized they must follow patriotic demands that compelled them to give up their adolescent freedoms and transform themselves from shōjo which connotes adolescent playfulness into gunkoku shōjo girls of a military nation with significant home front responsibilities Evacuation of women and children from the major cities out of fear of Allied bombing was covered in detail to emphasize willingness to sacrifice for patriotism portrayed through fiction news articles and photographs 131 The government controlled all the media and supervised popular magazines so their content would strategically spread the government s goals and propaganda 132 Condition at war s end Edit Health and living conditions worsened after the surrender in September 1945 Most of the housing stock in large cities was destroyed just as refugees tried to return from the rural areas Adding to the crisis there was an influx of 3 5 million returning soldiers and 3 1 million Japanese civilians forcibly repatriated from Imperial outposts in Manchuria China Indochina Formosa Korea Saipan and the Philippines about 400 000 civilians were left behind and not heard of again Meanwhile 1 2 million Koreans POWs and other non Japanese left Japan The government implemented pro natalist policies which led to an increase in the marriage rate but birth rates remained steady until they declined by 10 in the stress of the last year of the war and another 15 during the hardship of the postwar period 133 The American bombing campaign of all major cities severely impacted the economy as did the shortages of oil and raw materials that intensified when Japanese merchant shipping was mostly sunk by American submarines When industrial production was available to the military for example 24 percent of Japan s finished steel in 1937 was allocated to the military compared to 85 percent in 1945 134 By the end of the war output percent of the highest capacity was still 100 percent for steel although only 75 percent for aluminum 63 percent for machine tools 42 percent for vacuum tubes 54 percent cement 32 percent cotton fabric and 36 percent for wool 135 Famines EditSevere food shortages were common throughout the war zones especially in Europe where Germany used starvation as a military weapon Japan did not use it as a deliberate policy but the breakdown of its transportation and distribution systems led to famine and starvation conditions among its soldiers on many Pacific islands 136 Bose 1990 studies the three great Asian famines that took place during the war Bengal in India Honan in China and Tonkin in Vietnam In each famine at least two million people died They all occurred in densely populated provinces where the subsistence foundations of agriculture was failing under the weight of demographic and market pressures In each cases famine played a role in undermining the legitimacy of the state and the preexisting social structure 137 Housing EditA great deal of housing was destroyed or largely damaged during the war especially in the Soviet Union 138 Germany and Japan In Japan about a third of the families were homeless at the end of the war 139 In Germany about 25 of the total housing stock was destroyed or heavily damaged in the main cities the proportion was about 45 140 Elsewhere in Europe 22 of the prewar housing in Poland was totally destroyed 21 in Greece 9 in Austria 8 in the Netherlands 8 in France 7 in Britain 5 Italy and 4 in Hungary 141 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to World War II home front Economic warfare Lotta Svard women in Finland Military history of the British Commonwealth in the Second World War Military production during World War II Paper Salvage 1939 50 Rosie the Riveter Squander Bug Utility furniture Veronica Foster Women in World War IIReferences Edit Martin Conway Collaboration in Belgium Leon Degrelle and the Rexist Movement 1940 1944 1993 Bob Moore Jewish Self Help and Rescue in the Netherlands during the Holocaust in Comparative Perspective Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis 2011 124 4 pp 492 505 Jose Gotovitch La Rustungs Inspektion Belgien Archives et Bibliotheques de Belgique 1969 40 3 pp 436 448 Peter Schrijvers Liberators The Allies and Belgian Society 1944 1945 2009 Peter Williams and David Wallace Unit 731 Japan s Secret Biological Warfare in World War II Free Press 1989 Rod Kedward Occupied France Collaboration And Resistance 1940 1944 1991 Matthew Cobb The Resistance The French Fight against the Nazis 2009 Julian Jackson France The Dark Years 1940 1944 2003 Sarah Fishman We Will Wait Wives of French Prisoners of War 1940 1945 1991 Miranda Pollard Reign of Virtue Mobilizing Gender in Vichy France 1998 Hanna Diamond Women and the Second World War in France 1939 1948 Choices and Constraints 1999 E M Collingham The Taste of War World War Two and the Battle for Food 2011 Kenneth Moure Food Rationing and the Black Market in France 1940 1944 French History June 2010 Vol 24 Issue 2 p 272 3 Mattapan 2010 Vitamin D Available from Vitamin D Mattapan Community Health Center Archived from the original on 2013 04 15 Retrieved 2013 03 25 British Library 2005 1900s food Available from https www bl uk learning langlit booksforcooks 1900s 1900sfood html Moure Food Rationing and the Black Market in France 1940 1944 pp 262 282 C Banning C Food Shortage and Public Health First Half of 1945 Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol 245 The Netherlands during German Occupation May 1946 pp 93 110 in JSTOR Lizzie Collingham Taste of War World War II and the Battle for Food 2011 pp 180 218 Mark Rutherford Prelude to the final solution Richard Lukas The Other Holocaust Jan Gross Polish Society Under German Occupation Roland Charles G 1992 Scenes of Hunger and Starvation Courage Under Siege Disease Starvation and Death in the Warsaw Ghetto New York Oxford University Press pp 99 104 ISBN 978 0 19 506285 4 Odot PDF Jerusalem Yad Vashem Czeslaw Madajczyk Polityka III Rzeszy w okupowanej Polsce Panstwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe Warszawa 1970 p 226 volume 2 Gutman 1994 Gutman 1994 Davies 2004 p 70 Bishop John Barber and Mark Harrison The Soviet Home Front 1941 1945 a social and economic history of the USSR in World War II 1991 p 77 Barber and Harrison The Soviet Home Front 1941 1945 pp 81 85 86 Barber and Harrison The Soviet Home Front 1941 1945 pp 81 85 86 Barber and Harrison The Soviet Home Front 1941 1945 pp 91 93 Barber and Harrison The Soviet Home Front 1941 1945 pp 91 93 Barber and Harrison The Soviet Home Front 1941 1945 pp 86 87 Richard Bidlack Survival Strategies in Leningrad during the First Year of the Soviet German War in The People s War Responses to World WarII in the Soviet Union eds Robert W Thurston and Bernd Bonwetsch Urbana University of Illinois Press 2000 88 Bidlack Survival Strategies in Leningrad p 89 Bidlack Survival Strategies in Leningrad pp 93 94 Bidlack Survival Strategies in Leningrad p 97 Bidlack Survival Strategies in Leningrad p 98 World War II Civic Responsibility PDF Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 25 March 2014 Alecea Standlee Shifting Spheres Gender Labor and the Construction of National Identity in U S Propaganda during the Second World War Minerva Journal of Women amp War Spring 2010 Vol 4 Issue 1 pp 43 62 World War II in Ronald E Dolan ed Philippines A Country Study 1991 online Bernard Norling The Intrepid Guerrillas of North Luzon 2005 Dear and Foot eds Oxford Companion to World War II pp 877 79 Francis K Danquah Reports on Philippine Industrial Crops in World War II from Japan s English Language Press Agricultural History 2005 79 1 pp 74 96 in JSTOR Francis K Danquah Reports on Philippine Industrial Crops in World War II from Japan s English Language Press Agricultural History 2005 79 1 pp 74 96 in JSTOR Stanley Karnow In Our Image America s Empire in the Philippines 1989 pp 308 9 Satoshi Ara Food supply problem in Leyte Philippines during the Japanese Occupation 1942 44 Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 2008 39 1 pp 59 82 Francis K Danquah Japan s Food Farming Policies in Wartime Southeast Asia The Philippine Example 1942 1944 Agricultural History 1990 64 3 pp 60 80 in JSTOR Alfredo G Parpan The Japanese and the Philippine Church 1942 45 Philippine Studies 1989 37 4 pp 451 466 Victory Gosiengfiao The Japanese Occupation The Cultural Campaign Philippine Studies 1966 14 2 pp 228 242 David Littlewood Conscription in Britain New Zealand Australia and Canada during the Second World War History Compass 18 4 2020 online Mark Donnelly Britain in the Second World War 1999 is a short survey Angus Calder The People s War Britain 1939 45 1969 is the standard scholarly history Postan 1952 Chapter 4 Hancock British War Economy online p 353 see Sources for the History of London 1939 45 Rationing History in Focus War Calder The People s War Britain 1939 45 1969 pp 276 83 A J P Taylor English History 1914 1945 1965 p 454 Calder The People s War 1969 pp 35 50 F M Leventhal Twentieth Century Britain an Encyclopedia 1995 pp 74 75 830 Brian Abel Smith The Beveridge report Its origins and outcomes International Social Security Review 1992 45 1 2 pp 5 16 online Jose Harris War and social history Britain and the home front during the Second World War Contemporary European History 1992 1 1 pp 17 35 Paul Addison The Impact of the Second World War in Paul Addison and Harriet Jones eds A Companion to Contemporary Britain 1939 2000 2005 pp 3 22 See BBC WW2 People s War 2006 Automatic Redirect Until November 1939 the Neutrality Acts prohibited the export of arms from the United States to belligerents James Pritchard A Bridge of Ships Canadian Shipbuilding during the Second World War 2011 Keesing s Contemporary Archives Volume IV V November 1943 p 6099 Ivana Caccia Managing the Canadian Mosaic in Wartime Shaping Citizenship Policy 1939 1945 McGill Queen s University Press 2010 Roger Daniels The Decisions to Relocate the North American Japanese Another Look Pacific Historical Review February 1982 Vol 51 Issue 1 pp 71 77 Ken Adachi The Enemy that Never Was A History of the Japanese Canadians 1976 Patricia E Roy The Triumph of Citizenship The Japanese and Chinese in Canada 1941 1967 2007 Ruth Roach Pierson They re Still Women After All The Second World War and Canadian Womanhood McClelland amp Stewart 1986 p 9 Gavin Long The Six Years War 1973 p 474 Frank Crowley ed A New History Of Australia 1977 pp 459 503 Geoffrey Bolton The Oxford History of Australia Volume 5 1942 1995 The Middle Way 2005 Eli Daniel Potts and A Potts Yanks Down Under 1941 1945 The American Impact on Australia 1986 Walter Yust Ten Eventful Years 1937 1946 1947 3 347 52 J V T Baker War Economy 1965 the official history and Nancy M Taylor The Home Front Volume I NZ official history 1986 Volume II Deborah Montgomerie The Limitations of Wartime Change Women War Workers in New Zealand New Zealand Journal of History 1989 23 1 pp 68 86 On the home front see Gwen Parsons The New Zealand Home Front during World War One and World War Two History Compass 2013 11 6 pp 419 428 online Making Britain Second World War 1939 1945 The Open University S N Sen History Modern India 2006 online Paul R Greenough Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal The Famine of 1943 1944 1982 Snow Philip 2004 The Fall Of Hong Kong Britain China and the Japanese Occupation Yale U P p 81 ISBN 978 0300103731 Jung Fang Tsai Wartime Experience Collective Memories and Hong Kong Identity China Review International 2005 12 1 pp 229 online Wei Bin Zhang 2006 Hong Kong The Pearl Made of British Mastery And Chinese Docile Diligence Nova Publishers p 109 ISBN 9781594546006 Wei Bin Zhang 2006 Hong Kong The Pearl Made of British Mastery And Chinese Docile Diligence Nova Publishers p 109 ISBN 9781594546006 Thomas Brodie German Society at War 1939 45 Contemporary European History 27 3 2018 500 516 DOI https doi org 10 1017 S0960777318000255 Richard Overy War and Economy in the Third Reich 1994 Adam Tooze Wages of Destruction The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy 2006 pp 429seq Edward L Homze Foreign Labor in Nazi Germany 1967 Panikos Panayi Exploitation Criminality Resistance The Everyday Life of Foreign Workers and Prisoners of War in the German Town of Osnabruck 1939 49 Journal of Contemporary History Vol 40 No 3 Jul 2005 pp 483 502 in JSTOR Ulrich Herbert Forced Laborers in the Third Reich International Labor and Working Class History 1997 Forced Laborers in the Third Reich an Overview Archived from the original on April 15 2008 Retrieved 2008 05 20 Smith Howard K 1942 Last Train from Berlin Knopf pp 115 116 120 131 Felscher Walter 1997 01 27 Recycling and rationing in wartime Germany Memories of the 1940s Archived from the original on 1997 05 27 Retrieved 2006 09 28 unreliable source Read Fisher Anthony David 1992 The Fall Of Berlin Fifth ed London Pimlico p 346 ISBN 978 0 7126 5797 6 Ryan Cornelius 2015 The Last Battle 2015 ed London Hodder amp Stouton ISBN 978 1 473 62007 0 Bronwyn Rebekah McFarland Icke Nurses in Nazi Germany Princeton University Press 1999 Gordon Williamson World War II German Women s Auxiliary Services 2003 pp 34 36 William I Hitchcock The Bitter Road to Freedom The Human Cost of Allied Victory in World War II Europe 2008 pp 250 56 Michael R Marrus The Unwanted European Refugees in the 20th Century 1985 ch 5 Richard Bessel Germany 1945 2009 Hitchcock The Bitter Road to Freedom 2008 pp 160 61 quote p 161 online Sheldon Garon Luxury is the enemy Mobilizing savings and popularizing thrift in wartime Japan Journal of Japanese Studies 2000 26 1 41 78 online Thomas Havens Valley of Darkness The Japanese People and World War Two 1978 p 108 Havens 1978 pp 135 37 Samuel Hideo Yamashita Daily Life in Wartime Japan 1940 1945 2015 p 124 Yamashita Daily Life in Wartime Japan 1940 1945 2015 p 172 Havens 1978 pp 145 154 161 3 167 Yamashita Samuel Hideo 2015 Daily life in wartime Japan 1940 1945 Lawrence Kansas p 11 ISBN 9780700621903 OCLC 919202357 Yamashita Samuel Hideo 2017 02 19 Daily life in wartime japan 1940 1945 p 11 ISBN 9780700624621 OCLC 1023381472 Tu Wei ming ed 1997 Confucian traditions in East Asian modernity moral education and economic culture in Japan and the four mini dragons Harvard University Press pp 147 153 ISBN 0674160878 OCLC 469805550 Yamashita Samuel Hideo 2015 Daily life in wartime Japan 1940 1945 Lawrence Kansas ISBN 9780700621903 OCLC 919202357 Kodera Yukio 2005 Senji no nichijō aru saibankan fujin no nikki Tokyo Hakubunkan p 119 Yamashita Samuel Hideo 2017 02 19 Daily life in wartime japan 1940 1945 p 172 ISBN 9780700624621 OCLC 1023381472 Ryukyu Shimpo Ota Masahide Mark Ealey and Alastair McLauchlan Descent Into Hell The Battle of Okinawa The Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus apjjf org Retrieved 2019 03 18 Inoue Kindai p 109 Dear Ian Foot M R D 1995 The Oxford companion to the Second World War Oxford University Press p 297 ISBN 0192141686 OCLC 46240444 Nakamura Takafusa et al eds Economic History of Japan 1914 1955 A Dual Structure vol 3 2003 326 32 Havens 125 Collingham The Taste of War 2011 pp 228 47 Food Situation November 2 1945 Asahi In Press Translations Japan Social series No 1 Item 3 Pages 2 3 ATIS G2 SCAP November 5 1945 Dartmouth Digital Library 2 Nov 1945 Retrieved 26 Oct 2015 Cohen 1949 Japan s Economy in War and Reconstruction p 368 9 John Dower Lessons from Iwo Jima Perspectives September 2007 45 6 pp 54 56 at 1 Thomas Havens Women and war in Japan 1937 45 The American Historical Review 1975 913 934 online Hirofumi Hayashi Disputes in Japan over the Japanese Military Comfort Women System and its perception in history The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 617 1 2008 123 132 Jacqueline M Atkins ed Wearing Propaganda Textiles on the Home Front in Japan Britain and the United States 1931 1945 Yale UP 2005 John W Dower Ways of Forgetting Ways of Remembering Japan in the Modern World 2012 pp 65 104 Kenneth Hewitt When The Great Planes Came And Made Ashes Of Our City Towards An Oral Geography Of The Disasters Of War Antipode 26 1 1994 1 34 online provides comparative experiences Anna Jackson Review of Wearing Propaganda Textiles on the Home Front in Japan Britain and the United States 1931 1945 Reviews in History Review Number 548 1 October 2006 Online Archived 2019 11 28 at the Wayback Machine Havens 1978 Nakamura Takafusa et al eds Economic History of Japan 1914 1955 A Dual Structure vol 3 2003 p 291 Nakamura p 298 Collinham 2011 Sugata Bose Starvation amidst Plenty The Making of Famine in Bengal Honan and Tonkin 1942 45 Modern Asian Studies July 1990 Vol 24 Issue 4 pp 699 727 in JSTOR One third of the Soviet housing stock was damaged or destroyed according to Jane R Zavisca 2012 Housing the New Russia Cornell UP p 29 ISBN 978 0801464775 Niall Ferguson The Second World War as an Economic Disaster in Michael J Oliver and Derek Howard Aldcroft ed 2007 Economic Disasters of the Twentieth Century Edward Elgar p 83 ISBN 9781847205490 Jeffry M Diefendorf Professor and Chair of the History Department University of New Hampshire 1993 In the Wake of War The Reconstruction of German Cities after World War II The Reconstruction of German Cities after World War II Oxford UP pp 126 27 ISBN 9780195361094 W S Woytinsky and E S Woytinsky World Population and Production Trends and Outlook 1953 p 134 using 1949 UN estimates Sources Edit ATIS G2 SCAP Food Situation 2 Nov 1945 Asahi in Press Translations Japan Social series No 1 Item 3 pp 2 3 Japanese newspaper translations Baker J V T War Economy 1965 Barber John and Mark Harrison The Soviet Home Front A Social and Economic History of the USSR in World War II Longman 1991 Bessel Richard Germany 1945 2009 Calder Angus 1969 The People s War Britain 1939 45 Cohen Jerome 1949 Japan s Economy in War and Reconstruction University of Minnesota Press online version Collingham E M The Taste of War World War Two and the Battle for Food 2011 Davies Norman 2004 Rising 44 The Battle for Warsaw Viking ISBN 0 670 03284 0 Dear I C B and M R D Foot eds The Oxford Companion to World War II 1995 Diamond Hanna Women and the Second World War in France 1939 1948 Choices and Constraints 1999 Gross Jan T Polish Society under German Occupation The Generalgouvernement 1939 1944 Princeton UP 1979 Gutman Israel 1994 Resistance The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 60199 0 Hancock W K and Gowing M M 1949 British War Economy History of the Second World War United Kingdom Civil Series London HMSO and Longmans Green amp Co Available on line at British War Economy Harris Jose War and social history Britain and the home front during the Second World War Contemporary European History 1992 1 1 pp 17 35 Harrison Mark 1988 Resource Mobilization for World War II The U S A UK USSR and Germany 1938 1945 In Economic History Review 1988 pp 171 92 Havens Thomas R Valley of Darkness The Japanese People and World War II 1978 Hitchcock William I The Bitter Road to Freedom The Human Cost of Allied Victory in World War II Europe 2009 Jackson Julian France The Dark Years 1940 1944 2003 660pp online edition Kedward H R Occupied France Collaboration and Resistance Oxford UP 1985 Nakamura Takafusa et al eds Economic History of Japan 1914 1955 A Dual Structure vol 3 2003 Overy Richard War and Economy in the Third Reich Oxford UP 1994 Pierson Ruth Roach They re Still Women After All The Second World War and Canadian Womanhood McClelland and Stewart 1986 Postan Michael 1952 British War Production History of the Second World War United Kingdom Civil Series London HMSO and Longmans Green amp Co Available on line at British War Production Taylor Nancy M The Home Front Volume I NZ official history 1986 Volume II Thurston Robert W and Bernd Bonwetsch eds The People s War Responses to World War II in the Soviet Union 2000 Titmuss Richard M 1950 Problems of Social Policy History of the Second World War United Kingdom Civil Series London HMSO and Longmans Green amp Co Available on line at Problems of Social Policy Tooze Adam The Wages of Destruction The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy 2008 Yamashita Samuel Hideo Daily Life in Wartime Japan 1940 1945 2015 Yust Walter ed 10 Eventful Years 1937 1946 4 vol Encyclopaedia Britannica 1947 Further reading EditGeneral Edit Beck Earl R The European Home Fronts 1939 1945 Harlan Davidson 1993 brief survey Bohm Duchen Monica Art and the Second World War Princeton University Press 2014 288 pages covers art produced in all the major belligerents Costello John Love Sex and War Changing Values 1939 1945 1985 US title Virtue under Fire How World War II Changed Our Social and Sexual Attitudes Geyer Michael and Adam Tooze eds 2017 The Cambridge History of the Second World War Volume 3 Total War Economy Society and Culture Harrison Mark ed The economics of World War II six great powers in international comparison Cambridge University Press 2000 widely cited covers all the major powers Higonnet Margaret R et al eds Behind the Lines Gender and the Two World Wars Yale UP 1987 Loyd E Lee ed World War II in Europe Africa and the Americas with General Sources A Handbook of Literature and Research Greenwood Press 1997 525pp bibliographic guide Loyd E Lee ed World War II in Asia and the Pacific and the War s aftermath with General Themes A Handbook of Literature and Research Greenwood Press 1998 Marwick Arthur War and Social Change in the Twentieth Century A Comparative Study of Britain France Germany Russia and the United States 1974 Mazower Mark Hitler s Empire How the Nazis Ruled Europe 2009 Milward Alan War Economy and Society 1977 covers home front of major participants Noakes Jeremy ed The Civilian in War The Home Front in Europe Japan and the U S A in World War II Exeter UK University of Exeter 1992 Overy Richard The Bombers and the Bombed Allied Air War Over Europe 1940 1945 Viking 2014 562 pages covers the civil defence and the impact on the home fronts of Allied strategic bombing of Germany Italy France the Netherlands Belgium Bulgaria and Scandinavia Toynbee Arnold ed Survey Of International Affairs Hitler s Europe 1939 1946 1954 online detailed coverage Wright Gordon The Ordeal of Total War 1968 covers all of Europe WWII Homefront Collection of color photographs of the home front during World War IIBritish Empire Edit Jackson Ashley The British Empire and the First World War BBC History Magazine 9 11 2008 online short essay Jackson Ashley The British Empire and the Second World War 2007 604 pages comprehensive coverage Jackson Ashley Yasmin Khan and Gajendra Singh eds An Imperial World at War The British Empire 1939 45 2017 excerptAustralia Edit Hasluck Paul The Government and the People 1939 41 1965 online vol 1 The Government and the People 1942 45 1970 online vol 2 Butlin S J War Economy 1939 42 1955 online Butlin S J and C B Schedvin War Economy 1942 1945 1977 online Darian Smith Kate On the Home Front Melbourne in Wartime 1939 1945 Australia Oxford UP 1990 Saunders Kay War on the Homefront State Intervention in Queensland 1938 1948 1993 Canada Edit Bray Bonita From Flag Waving to Pragmatism Images of Patriotism Heroes and War in Canadian World War II Propaganda Posters Material Culture Review Revue de la culture materielle 1995 42 1 online Broad Graham A Small Price to Pay Consumer Culture on the Canadian Home Front 1939 45 2013 Bruce Jean Back the attack Canadian women during the Second World War at home and abroad Macmillan of Canada 1985 Douglas William Alexander Binny and Brereton Greenhous eds Out of the shadows Canada in the Second World War Dundurn 1995 Durflinger Serge Fighting from Home The Second World War in Verdun Quebec UBC Press 2011 Granatstein J L Canada s War The Politics of the Mackenzie King Government Oxford UP 1975 Granatstein J L and Desmond Morton A Nation Forged in Fire Canadians and the Second World War 1939 1945 1989 Keshen Jeffrey A Saints Sinners and Soldiers Canada s Second World War 2004 Latta Ruth The Memory of All That Canadian Women Remember World War II Burnstown Ontario The General Store Publishing House 1992 Perrun Jody The Patriotic Consensus Unity Morale and the Second World War in Winnipeg 2014 India Edit Khan Yasmin The Raj At War A People s History Of India s Second World War 2015 a major comprehensive scholarly studyNew Zealand Edit Whitfeld Frederick Lloyd Political and External Affairs 1958 NZ official history Hall D O W Women at War in Episodes amp Studies Volume 1 Historical Publications Branch Wellington New Zealand 1948 pp 1 33 online Parsons Gwen The New Zealand Home Front during World War One and World War Two History Compass 11 6 2013 419 428 United Kingdom Edit Braybon Gail and Penny Summerfield 1987 Out of the cage women s experiences in two world wars Calder Angus 1969 The People s War Britain 1939 1945 a standard scholarly survey online review Field Geoffrey G 2011 Blood Sweat and Toil Remaking the British Working Class 1939 1945 DOI 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199604111 001 0001 online Gardiner Juliet 2004 Wartime Britain 1939 1945 782pp comprehensive social history Hancock W K 1951 Statistical Digest of the War official History of the Second World War Online at Statistical Digest of the War Harris Carol 2000 Women at War 1939 1945 The Home Front ISBN 0 7509 2536 1 Marwick Arthur 1976 The Home Front The British and the Second World War heavily illustrated Zweiniger Bargielowska Ina Austerity in Britain Rationing Controls amp Consumption 1939 1955 2000 286p onlineChina Edit Coble Parks M China s New Remembering of the Anti Japanese War of Resistance 1937 1945 The China Quarterly 2007 190 394 410 Eastman Lloyd Seeds of Destruction Nationalist China in War and Revolution 1937 1945 Stanford University Press 1984 Fairbank John and Albert Feuerwerker eds Republican China 1912 1949 in The Cambridge History of China vol 13 part 2 Cambridge University Press 1986 Guo Rugui editor in chief Huang Yuzhang China s Anti Japanese War Combat Operations Jiangsu People s Publishing House 2005 Hsiung James C and Steven I Levine eds China s Bitter Victory The War with Japan 1937 1945 M E Sharpe 1992 Hsi sheng Ch i Nationalist China at War Military Defeats and Political Collapse 1937 1945 University of Michigan Press 1982 Hsu Long hsuen and Chang Ming kai History of The Sino Japanese War 1937 1945 2nd Ed Chung Wu Publishers 1972 Lary Diana The Chinese People at War Human Suffering and Social Transformation 1937 1945 2010 France Edit Fishman Sarah et al France at War Vichy and the Historians online 360 pp Gildea Robert 2002 Marianne in Chains In Search of the German Occupation 1940 1945 London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 78230 9 Gordon B ed Historical Dictionary of World War Two France The Occupation Vichy and the Resistance 1938 1946 1998 Hall W D The Youth of Vichy France Oxford 1981 Simon Kitson s Vichy webpage articles document amp excerpts extensive coverage edited by British scholar Paxton Robert O Vichy France 1940 1944 Old Guard and New Order 1940 1944 2nd ed 2001 Germany Edit Biddiscombe Perry Into the Maelstrom German Women in Combat 1944 45 War amp Society 2011 30 61 89 Brodie Thomas German Society at War 1939 45 Contemporary European History 27 3 2018 500 516DOI https doi org 10 1017 S0960777318000255 Burleigh Michael The Third Reich A New History 2000 Echternkamp Jorg ed Germany and the Second World War Volume IX I German Wartime Society 1939 1945 Politicization Disintegration and the Struggle for Survival 2008 Evans Richard J The Third Reich at War 2010 Hagemann Karen and Stefanie Schuler Springorum Home Front The Military War and Gender in Twentieth Century Germany Berg 2002 Hagemann Karen Mobilizing Women for War The History Historiography and Memory of German Women s War Service in the Two World Wars Journal of Military History 2011 75 1055 1093 Kalder N The German War Economy Review of Economic Studies 13 1946 33 52 in JSTOR Klemperer Victor I Will Bear Witness 1942 1945 A Diary of the Nazi Years 2001 memoir by partly Jewish professor Milward Alan The German Economy at War 1965 Owings Alison ed Frauen German Women Recall the Third Reich 1995 primary source Speer Albert Inside the Third Reich Memoirs 1970 primary source on the economy by a key decision maker Steinert Marlis G Hitler s war and the Germans Public Mood and Attitude during the Second World War 1977 Stephenson Jill Hitler s Home Front Wurttemberg under the Nazis 2006 Greece Edit Iatrides John O ed Greece in the 1940s A Nation In Crisis 1981 Mazower Mark After the War Was Over Reconstructing the Family Nation and State in Greece 1943 1960 2000 Sweet Escott Bickham Greece A Political and Economic Survey 1939 1953 1954 Italy Edit Bosworth R J B Mussolini s Italy Life Under the Fascist Dictatorship 1915 1945 2007 De Grazia Victoria How Fascism Ruled Women Italy 1922 1945 1993 Tracy Koon Believe Obey Fight Political Socialization in Fascist Italy 1922 1943 U North Carolina Press 1985 Morgan D Italian Fascism 1919 1945 1995 Wilhelm Maria de Blasio The Other Italy Italian Resistance in World War II W W Norton 1988 272 pp Williams Isobel Allies and Italians under Occupation Sicily and Southern Italy 1943 45 Palgrave Macmillan 2013 xiv 308 pp online review Willson Perry Empire Gender and the Home Front in Fascist Italy Women s History Review 16 4 2007 487 500 Japan Edit Cook Haruko Taya and Theodore Cook Japan at War An Oral History 1992 interviews Dower John Japan in War and Peace 1993 Duus Peter Ramon H Myers and Mark R Peattie The Japanese Wartime Empire 1931 1945 Princeton UP 1996 375p Havens Thomas R Women and War in Japan 1937 1945 American Historical Review 80 1975 913 934 online in JSTOR Perez Louis G ed Japan at War An Encyclopedia 2013 pp 477 98 excerpts and text search Yoshimi Yoshiaki Grassroots Fascism The War Experience of the Japanese People Columbia UP 2015 360 pp online reviewLow Countries Edit Geller Jay Howard The Role of Military Administration in German occupied Belgium 1940 1944 Journal of Military History January 1999 Vol 63 Issue 1 pp 99 125 Sellin Thorsten ed The Netherlands during German Occupation Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol 245 May 1946 pp i to 180 in JSTOR 21 essays by experts Van Der Wee Herman and Monique Verbreyt A Small Nation in the Turmoil of the Second World War Money Finance and Occupation 2010 on Belgium Warmbrunn Werner The Dutch under German Occupation 1940 1945 Stanford U P 1963 Wouters Nico Municipal Government during the Occupation 1940 5 A Comparative Model of Belgium the Netherlands and France European History Quarterly April 2006 Vol 36 Issue 2 pp 221 246Philippines Edit Agoncillo Teodoro A The Fateful Years Japan s Adventure in the Philippines 1941 1945 Quezon City PI R P Garcia Publishing Co 1965 2 vols Hartendorp A V H The Japanese Occupation of the Philippines Manila Bookmark 1967 2 vols Lear Elmer The Japanese Occupation of the Philippines Leyte 1941 1945 Southeast Asia Program Department of Far Eastern Studies Cornell University 1961 246p emphasis on social history Steinberg David J Philippine Collaboration in World War II University of Michigan Press 1967 235p Poland Edit Chodakiewicz Marek Jan Between Nazis and Soviets Occupation Politics in Poland 1939 1947 Lexington Books 2004 Coutouvidi John and Jaime Reynold Poland 1939 1947 1986 Gross Jan T Revolution from Abroad The Soviet Conquest of Poland s Western Ukraine and Western Belorussia 1988 Kochanski Halik The Eagle Unbowed Poland and the Poles in the Second World War 2012 excerpt and text search Redlich Shimon Together and Apart in Brzezany Poles Jews and Ukrainians 1919 1945 Indiana U Press 2002 202 pp Wrobel Piotr The Devil s Playground Poland in World War II The Canadian Foundation for Polish Studies of the Polish Institute of Arts amp Sciences online Poland At War 1939 1945 Resources English bibliographyScandinavia Edit Andenaes Johs et al Norway and the Second World War ISBN 82 518 1777 3 Oslo Johan Grundt Tanum Forlag 1966 Kinnunen Tiina and Ville Kivimaki Finland in World War II History Memory Interpretations 2011 Nissen Henrik S Scandinavia During the Second World War 1983 Salmon Patrick ed Britain and Norway in the Second World War London HMSO 1995 Soviet Union Edit Berkhoff Karel C Harvest of Despair Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule Harvard U Press 2004 448 pp Berkhoff Karel C Motherland in Danger Soviet Propaganda during World War II 2012 excerpt and text search covers both propaganda and reality of home front conditions Braithwaite Rodric Moscow 1941 A City and Its People at War 2006 Dallin Alexander Odessa 1941 1944 A Case Study of Soviet Territory under Foreign Rule Portland Int Specialized Book Service 1998 296 pp Kucherenko Olga Little Soldiers How Soviet Children Went to War 1941 1945 2011 excerpt and text search Overy Richard Russia s War A History of the Soviet Effort 1941 1945 1998 432pp excerpt and txt search Vallin Jacques Mesle France Adamets Serguei and Pyrozhkov Serhii A New Estimate of Ukrainian Population Losses During the Crises of the 1930s and 1940s Population Studies 2002 56 3 249 264 in JSTOR Reports life expectancy at birth fell to a level as low as ten years for females and seven for males in 1933 and plateaued around 25 for females and 15 for males in the period 1941 44 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Home front during World War II amp oldid 1139453136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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