Haverford College
Quick Access
Quaker & Special Collections >

Welcome
About
Collections
Finding Aids
Research
Services
Exhibitions
Gest Fellowship
Blog

Grab a feed! Grab an RSS Feed
Subscribe to Email Updates Get Email Updates

  • Categories

    • Announcements
      • Hours
    • Collections
      • Art
      • Audio Visual
      • College Archives
      • Manuscripts
      • Photography
      • Rare Books
      • Treasures
    • Digital Projects
    • Events
    • Exhibitions
    • People
      • Gest Fellows
      • Interns
      • Staff News
      • Students
    • Publications
    • Uncategorized
  • View by Tag

    Abolition Africa Anti-Slavery Art Benjamin Franklin Cadbury Charles Roberts China Christopher Morley Civil War Conservation Cope CRALC Digital Libraries Evans Fanny Brawne France Germantown Gest Fellows GIS Greek Haverford Haverford History History of Science John Keats John Woolman London Maps Meeting Houses Music Native Americans New Jersey Nobel Prize PACSCL Philadelphia Quakers Rare Books Rene Descartes Rufus Jones Slavery William Penn William Pyle Phillips William Shakespeare WWI WWII
  • Archives

  • Admin

    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.org

Posts Tagged ‘NGOs’

2009 Gest Fellow: Michael E. McGuire

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

From time to time, we will be posting profiles of our Gest Fellows. Michael E. McGuire is a Ph.D. candidate in History at Boston University.  His research is on “Quaker NGOs That Offered Humanitarian Aid to France During and After World War I.”

Michael E. McGuire 2009 Gest Fellow

Michael E. McGuire 2009 Gest Fellow

I am researching the work of American non-governmental organizations (NGOs) formed to aid French civilians during World War I, and to assist France’s postwar reconstruction, to see whether such NGOs affected Franco-American relations. These NGOs include large umbrella organizations like the American Red Cross, and smaller NGOs like the American Friends’ Reconstruction Unit, which trained at Haverford before deploying to France. I am particularly interested in how American Friends were selected and trained for their work in France, how they integrated with existing English Friends’ operations, how the Friends cooperated with similarly-concerned governments and NGOs, how American Friends overcame the language barrier (many tried to brush up or learn French on the voyage or on the job), how both French and American cultures interacted when American Friends entered and remained in parts of France, and how both Friends and French people commemorated NGO work after it largely ceased in 1920.

Tags: France, Gest Fellows, NGOs, WWI
Posted in Gest Fellows | Comments Off

Haverford College • 370 Lancaster Avenue • Haverford, PA 19041
Quaker & Special Collections is proudly powered by WordPress