Yes, women were proud to finally show that they were capable of the same amount of work that men did. They worked the same hours and got the same paycheck. This was a big deal because before their employment in WWI, women were treated as insignificant to men in the workforce. African Americans also migrated from the South to join the workforce in the Great Migration.
. Women found new opportunities outside the home.
yes
With a lot of the men off fighting, the women were needed to keep the factories going.
The process forcing people to join the army during World War 1 was called conscription
81,000
Women in Australia were encouraged to join the army. Some women even fought in battle in war zones. Others worked at industrial jobs in factories and as nurses.
The League of Nations
69% or 9 million eligible women workers
It's our war too.
Rosie the Riveter was the name of the woman who was used as propaganda to encourage women to join the workforce during the war. With most men gone off to fight, there were very few men left behind to work in the factories. Women were encouraged to help their country by working in factories.
With a lot of the men off fighting, the women were needed to keep the factories going.
yes
Women could join all branches of the armed forces during WW-II.
Congress authorized the Women's Auxiliary Corps in May of 1942.
In many nations women were encouraged to join female branches of the women's self-esteem as it allowed them to carry out their full potential and do their part. Women replaced men in many of the roundhouse jobs during World War II.
The pressure from women during World War 1 was mainly to get men to join the Army where they would be taken to France to fight in the dismal trenches so the only men left in Britain were too old, physically unwell or a Christian. the pressure women put onto their husbands or boyfriends was to join the army otherwise they did not love them, forcing the men to join otherwise they would be thought of as a coward.
Both eras follow directly after the World Wars. Both birthed new ages in music, during the 1920's jazz became popular, and in the 1950's rock became popular. Women began to join the workforce in both of these eras, spurning cultural revolutions.
Patriotism.
In both the allied force nations and in the axis force nations women went to work in the war manufacturing plants. In most of the allied nations not only did women join that work force but the minorities and natives (such as Aborigines in Australia and Blacks, Mexicans and Chinese) joined the war effort in the plants, shipyards, and local government positions (like transit services).After the war these people groups learned they could join the work force in many ways and places. Businesses began hiring the women and minorities whereas in the past they had not.In later decades women demanded equal rights in the workforce. In the US the blacks gained civil rights and demanded equal rights in the workforce and universities too.In Japan the women and girls were finally allowed to be educated and become and important part of the workforce.