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Introduction
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The introduction provides a contextual, theoretical and methodological overview of the book. It describes civil defence planning at a national level in the 1920s and 1930s, and the role of local authorities from the mid-1930s. The chapter outlines the different services within civil defence – air raid warden, messenger, firewatch, decontamination, rescue and demolition, casualty, report and control, and fire – and explains how the experience of war and civil defence working conditions changed during the war in different parts of the country. It then examines the development of ideas about active citizenship and voluntarism in the early twentieth century. Finally, the chapter discusses the significance of group identity and storytelling, introduces the theoretical approach taken to individual and group narratives in contemporary and memory texts, and provides an overview of the source material.

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Creating the people’s war

Civil defence communities in Second World War Britain

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