Skip to content

Donate to support our work

email signup

ForcesWatch

ForcesWatch
  • About
    • About ForcesWatch
    • ForcesWatch FAQs
    • Privacy policy
  • Our work
    • Military power in British democracy
    • Military recruitment & service
    • The military in education & youth activities
    • The military in society
  • Comment, analysis, news
    • Comment & analysis
    • News articles
  • What to do…
    • Before you sign up
    • If you are already in the armed forces
    • In your school/college/community
    • Resources to use with political representatives
    • Get involved in the campaign
  • Resources
    • The Warrior Nation podcast
    • ForcesWatch materials
    • research & reports
    • education materials
    • book/paper
    • audio & film
    • guidance
    • legislation & conventions
    • facts & figures
    • organisation
  • Projects
  • Contact
    • Get in contact
    • Stay in touch
  • Donate
  • Shop
    • Basket

Home » war commemoration

war commemoration

Hope in a time of luminous insanity

Reflecting on this dark time and commemorations of another 80 years ago, Joe Glenton writes on balancing hope and pessimism.


RAF100: A Short Counterhistory of Britain’s Air Force

2018 has been the centenary year of the Royal Air Force. While many think of the RAF in the sepia tones of the Battle of Britain, and the RAF leans heavily on a mystique that sets it apart from the army and navy, there is far more to be said about the service. We explore the role it has played in the last 100 years in bringing the asymmetry of air power to conflicts with often devastating effect.


White Poppies for Schools

updated August 2018

We have teamed up with the Peace Pledge Union to produce a White Poppy Schools Pack, which aims to explore Remembrance in a way that encourages critical thinking, and gives space for marginalised perspectives on war and peace. The learning resource can be read online here, or purchased from the Peace Pledge Union as a bigger pack including white poppies and white poppy leaflets.


Answering difficult questions about militarism

February 2017

With the presence of the military in public spaces increasing and a high level of popularity for the armed forces, it is not always easy to respond to challenging questions that people pose in when faced with concerns expressed about militarism. In this briefing we explore some responses to questions about how much the armed forces should be involved in our everyday lives, how they relate to young people, and the effectiveness and consequences of military action.


Quakers in Britain

The Quakers work on peace education, as well as other peace issues - carrying it out in schools and promoting it as a necessary part of the curriculum. See here for current Quaker projects, peace education resources and their partner organisations.


Rethinking Remembrance in Schools

November 2016

This paper, published by ForcesWatch, explores ways in which teaching remembrance in schools can be used as a way of encouraging critical thinking about what and how we remember, and how this can be used to foster a culture of peace.


Bringing it up to date: 100 years on from the First World War

This article, summarising ForcesWatch work, was first published on the White Feather Diaries website.


Three Days on the Western Front: A student’s experience of a school trip to the First World War battlefields

An account of a school trip in 2015 to the First World War battlefields by Joe Brydon, who was in Year 13 at the time, which raises various important questions about some of the ways that school students are being encouraged to remember war.


Children have no place in the British army

22/12/2015

The Guardian

Britain is the only country in Europe to recruit 16-year-olds into its armed forces. The cynical targeting of underprivileged youngsters must end


The Army offer ‘Soldiers to Schools’ as First World War Centenary ‘support’

10/06/2015

Army

In addition to placing a soldier on each school coach visiting the First World War battlefields (as part of the government’s flagship  Centenary initiative to have at least two students from every school in the country visit them), the Army have launched their own First World War teaching resources for schools, and are offering to send soldiers to schools to ‘support teaching activities’.


  • 1
  • 2
  • Next
Post navigation
Older posts
Page1 Page2 Next →
Advanced search
    • from
    • to

Subscribe

Sign up for our newsletter. See more options.


See our privacy policy

Support our work

If you'd like to support our work with a donation, choose Paypal or Patreon, or see more options here.

Become a patron at Patreon!

  • Home
  • About ForcesWatch
  • Comment, analysis, news
  • Our work
  • Projects
  • Resources
  • Contact

Creative Commons Licence

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

ForcesWatch, 2024.
  • Kids with guns introduction
  • Background information
  • Why this should be challenged
  • Local communities taking action
    • Wrexham
    • Leicester
    • Chester
    • Back
  • Strategies & resources

Subscribe to our newsletter for regular reflections and info


In subscribing, you give consent for us to send you our newsletter by email. You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from any email you receive from us. See our privacy policy.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with this.Ok or scroll to acceptNoPrivacy policy