Jewish Refugees and the British Nursing Profession
A Gendered Opportunity
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Manchester University Press
Published:7th May '24
Should be back in stock very soon
This book follows the lives of female Jewish refugees who fled Nazi persecution and became nurses. Nursing was nominally a profession but with its poor pay and harsh discipline, it was unpopular with British women. In the years preceding the Second World War, hospitals in Britain suffered chronic nurse staffing crises. As the country faced inevitable war, the Government and the profession’s elite courted refugees as an antidote to the shortages, but many hospitals refused to employ Continental Jews.
The book explores the changes in the refugees’ status and lives from the war years to the foundation of the National Health Service and to the latter decades of the twentieth century. It places the refugees at the forefront of manoeuvres in nursing practice, education and research at a time of social upheaval and alterations in the position of women.
Winner of the 2024 Lavinia L. Dock Book Prize 2024.
'Jewish refugees and the British nursing profession is a highly insightful book, very much to be recommended to all: historians, nurses, doctors, and, indeed, politicians.'
Leo van Bergen, Medicine, Conflict and Survival Journal
ISBN: 9781526167422
Dimensions: 216mm x 138mm x 18mm
Weight: 476g
272 pages