Cover image for Canada's greatest wartime muddle National Selective Service and the mobilization of human resources during World War II
Canada's greatest wartime muddle National Selective Service and the mobilization of human resources during World War II
Title:
Canada's greatest wartime muddle National Selective Service and the mobilization of human resources during World War II
Author:
Stevenson, Michael D., 1967-
ISBN:
9780773522633

9780773569652
Publication Information:
Montréal, Que. : McGill-Queen's University Press, c2001.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (x, 235 p.)
General Note:
Includes index.
Contents:
The regulatory framework of mobilization -- Native Canadian mobilization -- Student deferment -- War plant employees and other factory workers: the industrial mobilization survey plan -- coal labour in Nova Scotia -- Halifax longshoremen -- Meatpacking labour -- Female primary textile labour and nurses -- A recapitulation.
Abstract:
"To determine the government's commitment to a comprehensive mobilization strategy, Michael Stevenson considers the effect of National Selective Service policies on eight significant sectors of the Canadian population: Native Canadians, university students, war industry workers, coal miners, long-shoremen, meatpackers, hospital nurses, and textile workers. These case studies show that mobilization officials achieved only a limited number of their regulatory goals and that Ottawa's attempt to organize and allocate the nation's military and civilian human resources on a rational, orderly, and efficient scale was largely ineffective."--Jacket.
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