World War I home front labor mobilization

E259093

World War I home front labor mobilization refers to the large-scale organization and deployment of civilian workers, unions, and industrial resources to support the war effort through increased production, labor regulation, and social coordination away from the battlefront.

All labels observed (2)

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Statements (50)

Predicate Object
instanceOf aspect of World War I home front
historical process
labor mobilization
hasAspect collective bargaining under wartime conditions
coordination of transport and logistics labor
creation of new labor ministries or boards
dilution of skilled labor
expansion of female employment in industry
expansion of state bureaucracies managing labor
health and safety challenges in munitions plants
housing policies for war workers
industrial conscription in some countries
labor discipline measures
longer working hours in key industries
price controls affecting workers
propaganda aimed at workers
rationing systems affecting workers and families
recruitment of colonial workers for metropolitan industries
reorganization of factories for mass production
standardization of industrial processes
state regulation of labor markets
strike regulation and restriction
transport of rural workers to industrial centers
use of child and youth labor in non-combat roles
use of conscientious objectors in non-combat labor roles
use of emergency powers over industry
use of prisoners of war as labor in some countries
wage controls
hasConsequence changes in class relations on the home front
expansion of women’s role in the labor force
growth of trade union membership in several countries
postwar labor unrest and strikes
precedent for later wartime and total war labor policies
strengthening of state intervention in the economy
hasMainGoal coordinate civilian labor for the war effort
ensure steady supply of munitions and military equipment
increase war-related industrial production
involves civilian workers
colonial labor
conscription of labor in some empires
employers
migrant labor
state authorities
trade unions
women workers
occursDuring 1914–1918
partOf World War I
relatedTo home front social policy
total war
war economy

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Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Hugh Frayne participatedIn World War I home front labor mobilization
Alexander Legge participatedIn World War I home front labor mobilization
this entity surface form: World War I economic mobilization