Gender Stereotypes During World War Two

272 Words2 Pages
Throughout the war, the opinions of the younger lady inspectors were changing. They could no longer understand the desire of the senior inspectors to segregate their duties by gender. Livesey argues that the growing professionalisation of the lady inspectorate resulted to a weakening of the historic link between the department and philanthropic work. As a result, these new lady inspectors supported the amalgamation of their work with the male inspectors, and to have no distinction of sex in their work. The issue was to be controversial, with men and women both for and against the merging. McFeely argues that some male inspectors only supported the reorganisation in the hopes that it would result in women inspectors being under their control,

More about Gender Stereotypes During World War Two