Dr Barbara Hateley
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Honorary Research Fellow


- Qualifications
-
I initially studied for my first degree with the Open University gaining a BA (Hons) First Class. My MA was then completed at Oxford Brookes University focusing on both History and Art History with a dissertation on refugee Art Historians entering the UK during the Second World War. I completed my PhD at the University of Sheffield moving to concentrate on the families of British servicemen held prisoner of war during WWII and the British governmentâs dealings with these families.
Concurrently with these qualifications, I completed employment-based qualifications including a PGCE (Post-Compulsory) with the University of Greenwich, a Post-graduate Diploma in Education (Applied Linguistics) and a Post-graduate Certificate in Mentoring and Coaching in Education.
- Research interests
-
My current research continues my research into the experience of British POW families during WWII and includes both research into the Royal Horticultural Society âSeeds for Prisonersâ scheme of that period and continuing research into organisations supporting POW families during the same period focusing on the work of The Prisoners of War Relatives Association (POWRA) in Britain.
Publications
Books & Book Chapters:
War and Welfare: British Prisoner of War Families, 1939-1945. Manchester: Manchester University Press. 2010. 1SBN 0719078547
Moore, B. & Hately-Broad, B. (eds) Prisoners of War, Prisoners of Peace. Oxford: Berg, 2005. ISBN 1845201566
âCoping in Britain & France; a comparison of issues affecting the homecoming of prisoners of war following the Second World Warâ in Moore, B. & Hately-Broad, B. (eds.) Prisoners of War: Prisoners of Peace. Oxford: Berg, 2005 ISBN 1845201566.
âESOL through Sportâ in Herrington, M. & Kendall, A. (eds.) Insights from research and Practice. A Handbook for Adult Literacy, Numeracy & ESOL Practitioners. Leicester: NIACE, 2005.
âThe âIdle Womenâ: Breaking Gender Stereotypes on Britianâs Inland Waterways During the Second World Warâ (with Bob Moore) in Andrews, M. & Lomas, J. (eds.) The British Home Front: Images, Myths and Memories. Palgrave, 2014.
Forthcoming:
ââUndesirable Familiarityâ: British Womanhood and Italian Prisoners in World War IIâ (with Barbara Hately) in Matthias Reiss and Brian Feltman, Local Women, Sexuality and Prisoners of War, 1914-1956: Consorting with the Enemy (Palgrave 2021)
Journal Articles:
âNobody Would Tell You Anything. The British Government & Prisoner of War Families During the Second World War.â Journal of Family History. Vol27, no.4, 2002. ISSN 0363-1990
âLiving on Hope and Onions: The everyday life of British Servicemen in Axis captivity. 1939-1945. The Journal of the Second World War Experience Centre. 2003. (with Bob Moore).
âESOL through Sportâ. Research and Practice in Adult Literacy (RAPAL) Journal. Autumn 2003. ISSN 1747-5600.
âProblems and Good Practice in Educational Provision for Adult Travellers. The Wakefield âKushtiâ Project.â Intercultural Education. Vol15, no.3, 2004. ISSN 1467-5986.
âToday we have naming of parts. The development of basic education in the British Army in the Twentieth Centuryâ Research and Practice in Adult Literacy (RAPAL) Journal. Spring/Summer 2008. ISSN 1747-5600.
âCaptive Audience: Camp Entertainment and British Prisoners of War in German Captivity, 1939-1945â. Popular Entertainment Studies. Vol.5, Issue 1. ISSN 1837-9303 (with Bob Moore).
- Professional activities and memberships
-
Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.
- Public engagement
Since 2008, I have undertaken substantial public engagement activities centred on talks to a wide range of organisations including U3A groups, Womenâs Institutes, Probus groups and a range of other diverse womenâs organisations including a Farm Womenâs Group. These talks have included topics such as: Quilts made by Women Internees in Changi during the Second World War; Women Working on British Inland Waterways during WWII; First World War Silk Postcards.