First World War - Mobilization
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- Created by: beckie.pdf
- Created on: 01-04-21 11:18
Introduction
- Harnessing power of the countries potentional
- Key indicatior of the totality of the war
- Conscription - Young men into the military - Sending them up after they have done their service, ready to be called up if needed
- This model is designed for short wars - If you find yourself in a long war - You have to adapt this in order to increase the size of your army
- If you are taking these mass armies into the fields - Mobilise economy to support them
- Reconfigure your industial secture - Come up with processes to turn your peace good factories into war time factories
- Make interventions to ensure the basic supplies of warfare - Keep civilians and soliders going - Must be mobised - Coal and food - Well organised enough to keep economy going
- Process of mobilising minds - Get full engagment of the community into the war effort - Harder to measure - More complicated to do
- Purseigle (2012) - Highlights the type of resoruces you wish to mobilise
Self mobilisation - Segments of society mobilisating themselves - Do things to support the war effort - More nationalist, right wing and middle class parts of society- Material
- Technical
- Human
- Financial
- Cultural
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Raising Mass Armies
- Measuring the armies in millions - Along with the casulties
- Losing 3/4 million military dead - Britian
- Scale of expansion:
- 1914 - Only 3/4 of a million strong - Scattered across the globe
- Mobilised 5 million men - By end of the war
- Half of them are volunteers
- Half of them conscripts - Beginning of 1916
- Military contribution on the Western Front grows from the six division in 1914 to seventy in 1916 - Explanentional growth in the size of the army
- Problem - Britian does not have the infastructure to be able to do this rapidly - Unlike other European countries who have had conscription in place for years - Britian have to build their infastructure at the same time of building their army
- Americans - Also don't have a prewar army - Rate of expansion is more impressive than the British
- 100,000 men in April 1917
- By the end of 1918, around 2 milion had been deployed to Europe - Not the whole of the American Army, this is just what they are able to move over
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Mobilizing Economies
- The economy grew about 7% from 1914 to 1918 despite the absence of so many men in the services - The German economy strank 27%
- Soared from 8% in 1913 to 38% in 1918
- Despite fears in 1916 that minitions production was lagging, the output was more than adequate
- The annual output of artillery grew from 91 guns in 1914 to 8039 in 1918
- Warplanes soared from 200 in 1914 to 3200 in 1918
- Production of machine guns went from 300 to 121,000
- By 1916, Britian was funding most of the Empire's war expensitures, all of Italy's and two thirds of the war cost of France and Russia, plus smaller nations as well
- Shipments of American raw materials and food allowed Britian to feed itself and its army while maintaining her productivity - Financing was generally successful - City's strong finacial position minimized the damaging effects of inflation, as opposed to much worse conditions in Germany
- Consumer consumption decline 18% from 1914 to 1919
- Trade unions were encouraged as membership grew from 4.1 million in 1914 to 6.5 million in 1918, peaking at 8.3 million in 1920 before relapsing to 5.4 million in 1923 - Women were avaliable and many entered munitions factories and took other home front jobs vacated by men
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Mobilizing Minds - Imagination and Organisation
- Richard Bessel - 'Psychological mobilisation'
- David Stevenson - 'Mobilisation of emotions and intellect'
- John Hourne - Mobilising minds
- Mobilisation of Imagination - Through collected representations which are linked to existing belief systems and persieved values - Trying to go with the grain with what your people already think - Natures values - In viewing the enemy - Enemy demonised - Patriotic side - Fighting for our country and our way of life - Demonising the enemy - Stereotypes and creating a negative represation of the opponent
- Oganisation - Can be either government propoganda organisation - Ministrys focused on propoganda dymension - Pro war organisation mobilising - Right wing - Patriotic organisations come forwards - Mobilise the minds of their fellow citizens in support of the war - In Britian - National War Aims Committee - Making arguements for Britian should be getting from the War - Religious organisations - Churches - Mobilising in support of the war efforts
- Propoganda is an important part of this - Positive view of war effort - Negative view of the emeny - Police descent - What if someone disagrees with the propoganda preduced and what if they disagree with it and produce counter propoganda - Saying that the Germans are just like us etc - Use the legal frameworks - Use this security legislation - To clamp down on any descent on the propoganda messages - Defense of the Rhelm Act - Used in order to clamp down on those who have a differing message to the one of the government
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Nationalism and Propoganda
- When you start to demonise the enemy - Release various forces within your country - Outbreak of mob violence in Britian - After the sinking of the Lusitania in May 1915 - Any shop that has any persieved connection to Germany, people who are of Germany extraction - Subjected to mob violence - You have people who have been in Britian for 30-40 years - Who because they have a German name, are treated as the Enemy - Irony is that they left Germany to escape the unple asant ruling of the Kaiser
- Heratio Bottomley - Extreme example of something that is released as a result of these forces in Britian - Editor of John Ball magazine - Hyper nationalist publication - Crude in its propoganising - When war breaks out he is about to caught up in his fraudulant businesses - War allows him to relaunch himself as a patriotic speaker and recruiter of troops - Brands himself as the 'soilders friend' - He is able to tap into this cultural, political and psychological mobilisation and create for himself, harness and enhance this sence of hypernationalism
- John Ball Magazine - Towards the end of the war - Anyone who has a German family connection should be made to wear a special ribbon so everyone will know they have some connection to the Germans - Careful with there interactions with them there on wards
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Defense of the Realm Act (DORA)
- Passed in the United Kingdom
- 8th August 1914
- Four days after it entered the First World War
- Added to as the war progressed
- Gave the Government wide-ranging powers during the war, such as the power to requisition buildings or land needed for the war effort, or to make regulations creating criminal offences
- DORA ushered in a variety of authoritarian social control mechanisms
- Anti-War activists, including John MacLean, Willie Gallacher, John William Muir and Bertrand Russell were sent to Prision
- Designed to help prevent invasion ot keep morale at home high - Imposed censorship of journalism and of letters coming home from the front line - The press was subject to controls on reporting troop movement, numbers or any other operational information that could be exploited by the enemy - People who breached the regulations with intent to assist the enemy could be sentenced to death - 10 people were executed under the regulations
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