Results 251 to 260 of about 13,065 (288)
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The Prisoner of War

Military Medicine, 1990
The prisoner of war (POW) experience is greatly influenced by the environmental and sociocultural factors of the particular captivity setting. Among the most important coping mechanisms are communication, maintenance of military social structure, and personality flexibility.
R J, Ursano, J R, Rundell
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Women as Prisoners of War

Military Medicine, 1995
American women are increasingly becoming involved in combat-related roles. Inevitably, our country will have several killed and taken prisoner. No National Academy of Science/National Research Council or VA study has ever been undertaken to examine the chronic sequelae of the experiences undergone by these captured women.
W P, Skelton, N K, Skelton
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Prisoners of war

2014
1914-1918-Online International Encyclopedia of the First World ...
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Prisoner of War

Reviews in American History, 2009
Offshore prisons. Extraordinary rendition. Warrantless wiretaps. Torture. By pushing questions of civil liberties and human rights to the forefront of political consciousness, the war on terror has provided some new subjects of inquiry for American historians, while putting some old concerns in a new light.
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The Prisoner of War

American Journal of International Law, 1913
There is probably no branch of the laws of war which stands in greater need of explanatory comment than do the chapters relating to prisoners of war. The generation preceding the great peace conferences at The Hague was marked by a number of important wars of which continental Europe was the theater; during these conflicts the number of persons reduced
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Prisoners of War

Journal of the Association of Occupational Therapists, 1942
Jerome Davis, Clarence Richard Johnson
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The Prisoner of War

2019
This chapter moves between the policymakers in Washington, DC, and the prisoners of war in the United Nations Command (UNC) camp on Koje Island. It considers the stakes for both the policymakers and the prisoners of war in rendering the prisoner of war from a bureaucratic category of warfare into a political subject on the Cold War decolonizing stage ...
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Prisoners of War

Monthly Review, 2001
While the revered creator and abolitionist was doubtless addressing the barbaric treatment of four million of his people held in thralldom in the U.S. slave states, his voice resonates down through the corridors of time, touching and informing us as a new century dawns.
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PRISONERS OF WAR

Medical Journal of Australia, 1981
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