Abstract
In the fall of 1966, a small and informal group of wives whose husbands were classified as Prisoner of War (POW) or Missing in Action (MIA) formed a small and informal group. By December 12, 1969, this group of women had gained such power, influence, and a multitude of disparate followers that twenty-six met with President and Mrs. Pat Nixon at the White House. In part, the POW/MIA story is about a small group of women taking a decisive role to change the United States POW/MIA policy, accentuate the plight of the prisoners, and demand humane treatment by Hanoi—all in a national and global arena.
Citation
Smith, S.L. (2014), "The Uprising of POW/MIA Wives: How Determined Women Forced America, Hanoi, and the World to Change", Journal of Leadership Education, Vol. 13 No. 4, pp. 88-99. https://doi.org/10.12806/V13/I4/C10
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2014, The Journal of Leadership Education
License
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