The natural theologians and Darwin: a case of divergent evolution in the history of ideas
Policy reform and the politics of housing in the British Conservative Party 1924-1929
The rise of the therapeutic state: psychiatry and the system of criminal jurisdiction in New South Wales, 1890-1940
Drawing the line: sex education and homosexuality in South Australia, 1985
Model workers or hardened Nazis? The Australian debate about admitting German migrants, 1950-1952
Developmentalism and its environmental legacy: the western Australia wheatbelt, 1900-1990s
Expansion, suspicion and the development of the International Committee of the Red Cross: 1939-45
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has often been maligned for its actions, or lack thereof, during the Second World War. In particular the Committee has been criticised for its apparent inability to compromise its mandate to provide impartial and non-politicised relief. This article discusses some of the problems of this interpretation of ICRC history by showing that, contrary to the image of the ICRC as a "well-meaning amateur", the Committee responded to the challenges of the Second World War with a series of bold initiatives that were crucial to the organisation's long-term development. Not only did these initiatives improve the success of the ICRC's humanitarian mission, but they also stand as testament to an organisation that, though devoid of diplomatic status and political power, was able to conduct its work whilst being restricted by the policies of belligerent governments and the physical dangers of total war.