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Tables of Contents for Nurses of All Nations
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
About This History
xi
 
Joan E. Lynaugh
Barbara L. Brush
ONE Above All Other Things--Unity
1
38
Nancy J. Tomes
Geertje Boschma
The 19th-Century Women's Movement
3
3
Missionaries and Suffragists
6
2
The Origins of Women's Internationalism
8
2
The International Council of Women
10
2
Beginnings of the International Nursing Idea
12
4
The Birth of the ICN
16
3
The Buffalo Congress, 1901
19
5
The Berlin Congress, 1904
24
1
Nursing in Germany
24
2
Agnes Karll
26
4
The Business of the Berlin Meeting
30
2
The "Four Lions" and Unity
32
7
TWO The Essential Idea
39
32
Anne Marie Rafferty
Geertje Boschma
Professional Prerogatives
40
1
Forming the Imagined Community
41
3
Matrons and Militarism
44
3
Promoting the Public's Health
47
4
Suffrage and Citizenship
51
1
Obstacles to Implementing the ICN Idea
52
1
Taking a Position on Working Conditions
53
1
The Matter of Miss Nightingale
54
1
The War Years
55
4
Lurking Shades
59
1
The Russian Example
60
2
Coping with Political Realities
62
3
After Two Decades
65
6
THREE Seeking Stability in the Midst of Change
71
40
Meryn Stuart
Geertje Boschma
The New Leadership
71
3
The World After World War I
74
3
New ICN Agendas
77
1
The ICN and the LRCS
78
1
Continuing the Public Health Agenda
79
2
More Conflict
81
2
A More Representative and Responsive Organization
83
3
Facing East--China
86
2
The National Association of Nurses
88
1
Civil War in China
88
1
Persistent Issues at the ICN
89
2
Money and Membership
91
2
New Stability for the ICN
93
1
International Exchange Among Nurses
94
1
The Third Decade
95
1
Christiane Reimann Resigns
96
1
Differing Views on Public Health
97
1
The Role of the Rockefeller Foundation
98
3
Colonialism--Superior and Subordinate
101
3
Comradeship
104
7
FOUR From Chaos to Transformation
111
38
Joan E. Lynaugh
Struggling to Keep the ICN Alive
111
5
Suspended in War
116
2
Beginning Again
118
2
A New Internationalism
120
5
An Increasingly Sophisticated ICN
125
2
A Host of Issues
127
2
Becoming More Truly Universal
129
4
Who Is the Professional Nurse?
133
2
Defining Nursing Around the World
135
2
Human Rights and Nursing
137
1
New Leaders Coping With Old Problems
138
4
At Seventy
142
7
FIVE New Missions, New Meanings
149
46
Barbara L. Brush
Unity Through Communication
151
1
Ungraceful Withdrawal
151
2
Expanding Nursing's Voice
153
7
The Imagined Community in New Territories
160
2
A Legacy of Fortune and Scholarship
162
1
Accounts and Accountability
163
3
Growth on Many Levels
166
4
Nurses as a Social Force
170
3
Politics and Positions
173
1
Stretching the Boundaries Further
174
3
Nurses of Tomorrow
177
2
Regulating Nursing
179
2
Worldwide Shortage
181
2
Naming Nursing Care
183
2
Blueprint for the Future
185
10
SIX Epilogue
195
6
Barbara L. Brush
Joan E. Lynaugh
Appendix I. Selected Sources for This Study
201
4
Appendix II. The Presidents of ICN and Their Watchwords
205
2
Appendix III. Executives of the International Council of Nurses
207
2
Index
209