CONTINUED:
Di Felice, Paul. 'Manchester's Little Italy at war, 1940-1945 : "enemy aliens or a reluctant foe?"'.
Northern History, 39:1 (2002), 109-23. Publisher: Maney. ISSN 0078172X
Howald, Stefan. 'Life as an "enemy alien"'. In Malet, Marian; Grenville, Anthony (ed.),
Changing countries : the experience and achievement of German-speaking exiles from Hitler in Britain, from 1933 to today (London: Libris, 2002), 152-60.
Simpson, A. W. Brian.
In the highest degree odious : detention without trial in wartime Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992. 453 p.
Seller, Maxine Schwartz.
We built up our lives : education and community among Jewish refugees interned by Britain in World War II (Contributions to the Study of World History, 92). Westport (CT) and London: Greenwood, 2001. x, 261 p.
Seller, Maxine Schwartz. 'Filling the space : education, community, and identity in British internment camps during World War II'.
Paedagogica Historica, ns, 32:3 (1996), 685-707. ISSN 00309230. ISSN (electronic) 1477674X.
Sponza, Lucio.
Divided loyalties : Italians in Britain during the Second World War. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2000. 358 p.
Vance, Jonathan F. (ed.).
Encyclopedia of prisoners of war and internment. Santa Barbara (CA), Denver (CO) and London: ABC-Clio, 2000. 384 p.
Includes these articles:
Gottlieb, Julie V. 'Defence regulation 18B'. p.75.
Gottlieb, Julie V. 'Isle of Man' p.152-53.
Gottlieb, Julie V. 'Civilian internees - World War II - Britain'. p.52-54.
Saunders, Kay; Daniels, Roger (ed.).
Alien justice : wartime internment in Australia and North America. St Lucia (Qld): University of Queensland Press, 2000. xix, 323 p. ISBN 0702229911.
Panayi, Panikos. 'Immigrants, refugees, the British state and public opinion during World War Two'. In Kirkham, Pat; Thoms, David, 1942- (ed.),
War culture : social change and changing experience in World War Two Britain. (London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1995), 201-8.
Cere, Rinella. 'Women, internment and World War Two'. In Kirkham, Pat; Thoms, David, 1942- (ed.),
War culture : social change and changing experience in World War Two Britain (London: Lawrence and Wishart, 1995), 219-30.
Hooper, Alex. 'Wimbledon's forgotten residents : a Second World War internment camp at Wimbledon.'
Local History [Nottingham], 19 (1988), 19-20. ISSN 0266-2698.
Stent, Ronald.
A bespattered page? The internment of His Majesty's 'Most Loyal Enemy Aliens'. London: Deutsch, 1980. 282 p., illus. The author was an internee but writes a history not biography. Contends that the vast majority of aliens were Jews, as is he.
Abbott, Donald Macdonald,
Pitroddie Perspectives . 2003. This is relatively obscure, so thought I should include it. Pitroddie, a hamlet in Perthshire, Scotland, was a site for a POW camp towards the end of the war, and is referred to in this booklet. It is out of print but is available through the Local Studies section of the AK Bell Library in Perth. Let me know if you find it anywhere else, as I have not.
http://www.pkc.gov.uk Abbott has another pamphlet about this camp which is listed in the online catalogue of the Perth library, and which may cover the same material:
Prisoners of war at Pitroddie during the Second World War . Invergowrie: 2000.
Sometimes the categories of POW and internee were conflated, as internees were in some respects also POWs. So it is possible that some references to POWS do refer to internees, and some do not. I have included them where I think it is possible that they do.