PART I - INTRODUCTION: CONCEPTUALIZING VULNERABILITY, CARE AND WELFARE DURING THE 'GREATER WAR' (1912-1923).- Ingrid Sharp and Heidrun Zettelbauer; Introduction.- Susan Grayzel, Christa Hämmerle, Mary McAuliffe, Jessica Meyer, Ingrid Sharp; Round Table.- PART II - NEGOTIATING CITIZENSHIP, NATION AND THE STATE: WELFARE POLITICS AS INTERSECTIONAL AND GENDERED SPACE.- Judit Acsàdy; Foundations of Institutionalized Care as Social Work: Women's Activities to Support the Vulnerable, the Needy and the Victims During and After WW1.- Heidrun Zettelbauer; Negotiating Female Citizenship? Voluntary War Welfare Politics and its Gender Dimensions in Multi-Ethnic Spaces of the Habsburg Monarchy.- Clara- Anna Egger; Transcending the Political: The Case of Women's International League and Freedom and its Humanitarian Thought.- Ingrid Sharp; Comment.
- PART III - GENDERED EXPERIENCES AND AUTO/BIOGRAPHICAL NARRATIVES.- Christa Hämmerle; 'And for whom? And the thanks?': Disputed Histories of the Swiss Red Cross-Nurse Maria Pöll-Naepflin (1894-1972).- Ruth Nattermann; Professionalization, Feminism, and Humanitarianism in Times of War: Rosa Genoni (1867-1957),'an international life according to human dignity'.- Susan Meryem Rosita Kalayci; On Women's Stories of Sexual Violence and Caregiving in the Armenian Genocide and After.- Heidrun Zettelbauer; Comment.- PART IV - FIELDS OF CARE, CARE GIVERS, AND CARE RECEIVERS.- Viktoria Wind; Military Masculinity and In/Vulnerability in the k.u.
k. Military Medical Service During the First World War.- Louise Earnshaw; Psychological Borders and Humanitarian Aid: Mental Health Care Among Refugees and Returning Prisoners of War in Austria During the Greater War.- Alexia Moncrieff; Conflict, Faith and Vulnerability: The Troubles of anAustralian Army Doctor in the First World War.- Jessica Meyer; Comment.- PART V - AFTERMATHS AND TRANSITIONS.- Alison S. Fell; Interwar Networks of Care: The Afterlives of First World War Nurses.
- Holly Furneaux; Remembering Christmas 1914: Fraternisation, Gender, and Race.- Edita Gzoyan; Women as Victims and Rescuers: The Agony and Agency of Women During the Armenian Genocide.- Susan Grayzel; Comment.