'As an editor of several reference works, I find the ability of Michael Geyer and Adam Tooze to assemble such a superb range of authors and have them produce such high quality chapters for the third volume of Cambridge History of the Second World War to be nothing short of remarkable.' G. Kurt Piehler, Journal of World History
Introduction to Volume 3 Michael Geyer and Adam Tooze; Part I. Political Economy: Introduction to Part I Michael Geyer and Adam Tooze; 1. The economics of the war with Germany Adam Tooze and Jamie Martin; 2. Finance for war in Asia and its aftermath Greg Huff; 3. War of the factories Jeff Fear; 4. Controlling resources: coal, iron-ore and oil in the Second World War David Edgerton; 5. The human fuel: food as global commodity and local scarcity Lizzie Collingham; 6. Knowledge economies Cathryn Carson; 7. Seaborne transport Michael Miller; Part II. The Social Practice of Total War, 1939–1945: Introduction to Part II Michael Geyer and Adam Tooze; 8. Death and survival in the Second World War Richard Bessel; 9. Battles for morale: an entangled history of total war in Europe, 1939–1945 Jochen Hellbeck; 10. The war of the cities: industrial labouring forces Rüdiger Hachtman; 11. The war of the villages: the interwar agrarian crisis and the Second World War Adam Tooze; 12. Hors de combat: mobilization and immobilization in total war Geoffrey Cocks; 13. Environments, states and societies at war Christopher Pearson; Part III. The Moral Economy of War: Introduction to Part III Michael Geyer and Adam Tooze; 14. Just and unjust wars: military – civil society – states Michael Geyer; 15. Wars of displacement: exile and uprooting in the 1940s Yasmin Khan; 16. Sexuality and sexual violence Sabine Frühstück; 17. A war for liberty: the law of conscientious objection in the Second World War Jeremy Kessler; 18. Bringing the dogs of war to heel: pacifism in the Second World War Devin Pendas; 19. Humanitarian politics and governance: international responses to the civilian toll in the Second World War Stephen Porter; Part IV. Illusive Peace: From War to Cold War: Introduction to Part IV Michael Geyer and Adam Tooze; 20. The rise and fall of central planning David Engerman; 21. Two types of new deal. The Second World War and the renegotiation of the social contract in Britain, Europe and America Timothy B. Smith; 22. Nationalism, decolonization, geopolitics and the Asian postwar Rana Mitter; 23. Making peace as a project of moral reconstruction Mark Bradley; Part V. In the Aftermath of Catastrophic Destruction: Introduction to Part V Michael Geyer and Adam Tooze; 24. Interpretations of catastrophe Peter Gordon; 25. The ghosts of war Monica Black; 26. Popular memory, popular culture: the war in the postwar world Lucy Noakes; 27. The Second World War in global memory space Jie-Hyun Lim; 28. Landscapes of destruction: capturing images and creating memory through photography Dorothee Brantz; Bibliographical essay; Index.