Austenitic 21Cr32Ni model alloy thin foils, previously irradiated with 5 MeV Fe++ ions in bulk to create voids, were re-irradiated in-situ in the Intermediate Voltage Electron Microscope Facility (IVEM). The voids which had been formed under bulk-ion irradiation shrank and disappeared after in-situ Kr ion irradiation in the temperature range 50 K-713 K to an additional dose of 1 dpa. The voids were unaffected by eithersuccessive thermal annealing to 673 K and by prolonged exposure to the 200 keV electron beam at the irradiation temperature. The high void shrinkage rate observed did not change significantly for irradiation temperatures between 50 K and 713 K, suggesting that the void shrinkage process in thin foils during in-situ heavy-ion irradiation results from the interactions of displacement cascades with the voids. Possible void shrinkage mechanisms under thin foil irradiation are discussed in this study.