How Did Ww2 Change Australian Society

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In this essay, considerations will be given to the way in which the role of women changed because of WW2 changed How Australia’s international relations changed and the cause. This essay will also tackle immigration and the way, in which WW2 contributed to this and the impact of this on Australian society Women changed all through WWII, post-WWII in noteworthy ways, and had a great effect in administrations For example, Women had an assortment of parts all through World War II giving them a chance to encounter distinctive employments and parts that they, as a rule, did not do. A few occupations that women did while men were at war were building ships, working in manufacturing plants, making planes, being fire officers and departure officers, …show more content…

Helped passage was given not just to British people (who enter a country) but also to people (who enter a country) from mainland Europe and displaced people and (people who have run away from their own countries because of bad treatment). In all, 853,953 people (who enter a country) arrived in Australia between 1947 and 1960. The hit/effect of these 'new' Australians on (community of people/all good people in the world) was very …show more content…

For Australia, there were the benefits of creating a bigger domestic market and providing an (all the workers in a company or country) for new businesses and projects such as the Snowy Mountains Big plan/layout/dishonest plan. By international agreement, Australia took thousands of displaced people from Eastern Europe. In the 1950's and 1960's Greeks and Italians entered Australia in large numbers. In 1958, the federal government permanently stopped the (when someone BY 1942 SINGAPORE was one of the jewels in the crown of the British Empire. Complete with the nickname 'Gibraltar of the East' for its assumed impregnability, it served as a major shipping and trading hub, an important commercial centre and naval base, and a strong protector for growing British interests in South-East Asia. The British sent the newly built HMS Prince of Wales and the fight-hardened HMS Disgust/push away roughly to aid the defenders, but they were sunk by Japanese torpedo bombers before they could get there. Largest Surrender in British war