Civil resettlement: citizenship, mental health and masculinity in repatriated British POWs.

Gabriel Lawson
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Abstract

This article investigates the programme of 'Civil Resettlement' created by the British Army's Department of Army Psychiatry to respond to the challenge of resettling prisoners of war (POWs) returning to the UK in 1945. Former POWs were seen as asocial and potentially subversive and were therefore encouraged to undergo a period of treatment in a Civil Resettlement Unit (CRU) before re-entering civilian life. These units sought to inculcate emotional health, 'good citizenship' and healthy masculinity in a supposedly at-risk population. Ex-POWs were seen as lacking in each of these categories due to the psychopathological environment present in Axis POW camps. POWs needed assistance on their return, lest the social stresses of resettlement result in permanent mental harm. Civil Resettlement was originally conceptualized as the solution to the emergent problem of mentally unwell POWs, but those who devised the programme held that it could be expanded to society as a whole. Unfortunately, post-war austerity meant that CRUs left a smaller legacy than their founders had hoped, but the short-lived programme raises questions surrounding the social nature of health and the relationships between citizenship, masculinity, and mental health.

民事重新安置:遣返英国战俘的公民身份、心理健康和男子气概。
本文调查了1945年英国陆军精神病学部门为应对重新安置返回英国的战俘的挑战而创建的“民事重新安置”计划。前战俘被视为不合群和潜在的颠覆分子,因此鼓励他们在重新进入平民生活之前在民事重新安置股接受一段时间的治疗。这些单位试图向所谓的高危人群灌输情感健康、“好公民”和健康的男子气概。由于轴心国战俘营中存在的精神病理环境,前战俘被认为缺乏这些类别。战俘在返回时需要援助,以免重新安置的社会压力造成永久性的精神伤害。民事重新安置最初的概念是解决精神不正常的战俘的紧急问题,但方案的设计者认为,它可以扩大到整个社会。不幸的是,战后紧缩意味着cru留下的遗产比其创始人所希望的要少,但这个短暂的项目引发了围绕健康的社会本质以及公民身份、男子气概和心理健康之间关系的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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