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Article

Hidden presences: the role of next-of-kin in shaping the context and experience of POW captivity

Details

Citation

Wylie N (2025) Hidden presences: the role of next-of-kin in shaping the context and experience of POW captivity. Immigrants & Minorities, pp. 1-28. https://doi.org/10.1080/02619288.2025.2470831

Abstract
This article explores the role next-of-kin played in framing discussion over the treatment of military prisoners during the era of the two world wars. Prisoners¡¯ next-of-kin came to assume an influential position during the First World War, and this was reflected in the 1929 POW Convention, which deliberately anticipated their involvement in shaping public debate and government policy in future wars. These assumptions proved faulty; the Second World War saw a sharp decline in the influence of next-of-kin, and, as a consequence, the updated convention of 1949 looked to other mechanisms, notably the neutral inspection regime, to hold governments to their humanitarian obligations towards captured enemy combatants.

Keywords
Prisoner of war; civilian internees; 1929 Geneva convention; 1949 Geneva Conventions; international humanitarian law

Journal
Immigrants & Minorities

StatusPublished
Publication date online31/03/2025
Date accepted by journal17/02/2025
PublisherInforma UK Limited
ISSN0261-9288
eISSN1744-0521
eISBN1744-0521

People (1)

Professor Neville Wylie

Professor Neville Wylie

Deputy Principal, History

Files (1)