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    In War's Wake: Europe's Displaced Persons in the Postwar Order

    In War's Wake by Cohen, Gerard Daniel;

    Europe's Displaced Persons in the Postwar Order

    Series: Oxford Studies in International History;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 14 September 2017

    • ISBN 9780190840808
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages250 pages
    • Size 234x155x17 mm
    • Weight 381 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 1 halftone
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    Short description:

    After WWII, Europe was awash in refugees. Never in modern times had so many been so destitute and displaced. No longer subjects of a single nation-state, this motley group of enemies and victims consisted of Jewish survivors of the Holocaust, ex-Soviet POWs, ex-forced laborers in the Third Reich, legions of people who fled the advancing Red Army, and many thousands uprooted by the sheer violence of the war. This book argues that postwar international relief operations went beyond their stated goal of civilian "rehabilitation" and contributed to the rise of a new internationalism, setting the terms on which future displaced persons would be treated by nations and NGOs.

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    Long description:

    The end of the Second World War in Europe gave way to a gigantic refugee crisis. Thoroughly prepared by Allied military planners, the swift repatriation of millions of former forced laborers, concentration camp inmates and prisoners of war nearly brought this dramatic episode top a close. Yet in September 1945, the number of displaced persons placed under the guardianship of Allied armies and relief agencies in occupied Germany amounted to 1.5 million. A costly burden for the occupying powers, the Jewish, Polish, Ukrainian, Yugoslav and Baltic DPs unwilling to return to their countries of origin presented a complex international problem. Massed in refugee camps stretched from Northern Germany to Sicily, the DPs had become long-term asylum seekers.

    Based on the records of the International Refugee Organization, this book describes how the European DP crisis impinged on the shape of the postwar order. The DP question directly affected the outbreak of the Cold War; the transformation of the "West" into a new geopolitical entity; the conduct of political purges and retribution; the ideology and methods of modern humanitarian interventions; the appearance of international agencies and non-governmental organizations; the emergence of an international human rights system; the organization of migration movements and the redistribution of "surplus populations"; the advent of Jewish nationhood; and postwar categorizations of political and humanitarian refugees.

    The prime purpose of this excellent book is not to provide a more inclusive and integrative social history but to do something far more ambitious: namely, to write an international history that places the DP issue in the context of the emerging Cold War, and as a factor in international justice and political retribution, the emergence of the human rights movement, the rise of United Nations humanitarianism, the governance of international migration, and the advent of Jewish statehood .[It] makes clear is how important that period was in shaping contemporary views of refugees and their plight.

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    Table of Contents:

    Acknowledgments
    Introduction: The Last Million
    Ch 1. The Battle of the Refugees: DPs and the Making of the Cold War West
    Ch 2. "Who is a Refugee?": From 'Victors' Justice' to Anticommunism
    Ch 3. Care and Maintenance: The New Face of International Humanitarianism
    Ch 4. Displaced Persons in the "Human Rights Revolution"
    Ch 5. Surplus Manpower, Surplus Population
    Ch 6. Extraterritorial Jews: Refugee Humanitarianism and the Advent of Jewish Statehood
    Epilogue: The Golden Age of European Refugees, 1945-1960
    Notes
    Sources and Further Reading
    Index

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