Negotiating Global Migrations, 1944–1959

Upcoming Conference: Negotiating Global Migrations, 1944-1959

Organizer
University of Vienna (Prof. Dr. Kerstin von Lingen, Department of Contemporary History), University of Osnabrück (Prof. Dr. Christoph Rass, PD Dr. Frank Wolff, IMIS – Institut für Migrationsforschung und Interkulturelle Studien)
Venue
Hotel Regina (Rooseveltplatz 15, 1090 Wien), "Salon Franz Josef"
Funded by
Austrian Science Fund (FWF), the Future Fund of the Republic of Austria, the Faculty of Historical and Cultural Studies, University of Vienna, and the German Research Foundation (DFG)
ZIP
1090
Location
Vienna
Country
Austria
Takes place
In Attendance
From - Until
15.04.2024 - 16.04.2024
By
Franziska Maria Lamp, Institut für Zeitgeschichte, Universität Wien, Historisch-Kulturwissenschaftliche Fakultät

Date: 15 & 16 April 2024
Venue: University of Vienna, Hotel Regina, “Salon Franz Josef”

The 1945 breakdown of the Nazi and the Japanese Empires led to the formation of a new global order. More than 60 million people were displaced and found themselves scattered across the war-torn landscapes of Europe and Asia. Mass displacement obliged the international community to find solutions that allowed to react to the humanitarian catastrophe on a global level.The conference discusses the role of international organisations and local actors for implementing global migration and resettlement regimes as well as the agency of victims of violence-induced mobility.

Upcoming Conference: Negotiating Global Migrations, 1944-1959

We cordially invite you to attend our international conference at the University of Vienna: "Negotiating Global Migrations, 1944-1959"

Venue: University of Vienna, Hotel Regina (Rooseveltplatz 15, 1090 Wien,“Salon Franz Josef”)
When: 15 and 16 April 2024

Convenors: DACH project “Norms, Regulation and Refugee Agency: Negotiating the Regime”, 2022-2025; a cooperation between the University of Vienna (Prof. Dr. Kerstin von Lingen, Institut für Zeitgeschichte) and the University of Osnabrück (Prof. Dr. Christoph Rass, PD Dr. Frank Wolff, IMIS - Institut für Migrationsforschung und Interkulturelle Studien)

If you would like to attend the conference as a participant, please register via email: erika.stiller@univie.ac.at

Conference abstract:
The 1945 breakdown of the Nazi and the Japanese Empires led to the formation of a new global order. More than 60 million people were displaced and found themselves scattered across the war-torn landscapes of Europe and Asia. Mass displacement in many regions of both continents stipulated a global movement of (trans)migration by repatriation and resettlement that obliged the international community to find solutions that allowed to react to the humanitarian catastrophe on a wider, in fact, global level. As a part of these joint international efforts, the postwar decade saw the establishment of new terminologies, procedures, and protocols, aiming at regulating mobility on a global scale, yet still based on multiple different national demands.

A new global refugee regime emerged through multi-layered negotiation processes between the institutional and administrative level (UN organizations such as UNRRA and CNRRA, IRO, nation states, religious relief organizations, various NGOs), relief organizations, and countless individuals categorized as migrants, refugees, Displaced Persons and others. Recipient countries such as Australia, Latin America, the USA and Canada, to name some preferred resettlement destinations, became important agents within the migration regimes.

In the post-war years, and especially when the IRO dealt with the so-called "hard core" of the remaining "Displaced Persons" still stranded in camps across Europe and Asia, a modern refugee regime took shape. While the modern concept of a refugee and initial steps towards international refugee policies had been developed during the interwar period as a consequence to forced displacements in Central, Southern and Eastern Europe, as well as in the Near East, the period after the Second World War presented new challenges and brought a more comprehensive approach towards the emerging, modern global migration regime. This development was not only shaped by mass mobility and displacement as issues for both local and global administration but also by the attempts to enact a human-rights based international order and the need of introducing humanitarian perspectives during the rapidly arising Cold War.

Studying normative changes, administrative practices, and human agency in the emerging refugee regime provides us with valuable insights into a highly mobile and formative period in the creation of a new world order in modern history. Most importantly, it casts light on the complex emergence of concepts, patterns of thought and organizational ideas that paved the way toward the implementation of the 1951 Geneva Refugee Convention. This path, however, was a crooked line at best, defined by emerging internationalism, national demands, Cold War humanitarianism, individual agency, and colonial trajectories. Exploring this complex constellation will provide us with new views on the emergence, the meaning and the limits of refugee protection in modern migration societies.

By focusing on negotiations of migration processes, this conference will zoom into an actor-centered global history of the emerging refugee regime by analyzing (a) the role of international organizations and experts in formulating globally impactful policies; (b) the interaction of these organizations and norms with state and local actors, such as politicians, practitioners and experts; (c) the agency of victims of violence-induced mobility during the interactive process of norm application and resettlement.

Programm

Monday, 15.04.2024

9:30-10:00: Welcoming remarks (Christoph Rass, Kerstin von Lingen)

10:00-11:00: Keynote speech by Peter Gatrell (University of Manchester): "Appointment in Geneva: Refugees‘ encounters with UNHCR"

PANEL I (11:30-13:00)
Chair: Christoph Rass
- Ismee Tames (NIOD Amsterdam & University of Utrecht): "Traces of illiterate stateless refugees in the correspondence of the Nansen Delegation in Berlin, 1921-1938"
- Jessica Reinisch (Birkbeck University of London): "UNRRA in the Archives"
- Katarzyna Nowak (University of Vienna): "Knocking on the Vatican’s Gates – Refugees and the Holy See in the Early Cold War"

PANEL II (14:30-16:00)
Chair Kerstin von Lingen
- Anna Holian (Arizona State University): "Refugee Integration in 1950s West Germany: The Early History of Economic 'Self-Reliance'”
-Linda Erker (University of Vienna): "Displaced Nazi Scholars and the Global Refugee Regime between Austria and Argentina after 1945"
- Sebastian Huhn (University of Osnabrück): "Negotiating Global Resettlement Within the Refugee Regime After the Second World War"

PANEL III (16:30-18:00)
Chair: Frank Wolff
- Dariusz Stola (Polish Academia of Sciences): "Refugees from Communism and Refugees Protected by Communists: the Case of Poland"
- Roderick Bailey (University of Oxford): "Stranded: The Experiences of a Displaced and Stateless UNRRA and ORT official in Italy, 1945-50"
- Philipp Strobl (University of Vienna): "Negotiating the Post war Migration Regime: Refugee Agency in Postwar Austria (1945-1955)"

Tuesday, 16.04.2024

PANEL IV (9:00-11:00)
Chair: Katarzyna Nowak
- Rachel Blumenthal (Hebrew University Jerusalem): "Divided Loyalties: UNRRA, Refugees and Compulsory Labour in Postwar Austria"
- Susanne Korbel (University of Graz): "The Convention for the Suppression of the Traffic in Persons and the “Control” over Jewish DPs, 1945 to 1951"
- Franziska Lamp (University of Vienna): "'Are you sufficiently informed?' The Gender-specific Dimensions of Information Campaigns for the Resettlement of DPs"
- Jessica Wehner (University of Osnabrück): "Norms, Practices and Marginality. The Production of non-Western Others in the Postwar Refugee Regime"

PANEL V (11:30-13:00)
Chair: Philipp Strobl
- Kerstin von Lingen (University of Vienna): "Migrating Objects. Displacement and loss of property as loss of belonging and identity"
- Frank Wolff (University of Osnabrück): "The Ambiguities of European Unification between Peace- Building, Cold War Bordering, and Coloniality (post-1945)"
- Klaus Neumann (Hamburger Stiftung zur Förderung von Wissenschaft und Kultur): "Looking Back, but Not Too Closely– Mobilisation of Historical Narratives in Current Debates About Irregular Migration"
- Concluding Remarks (Frank Wolff)

Contact (announcement)

erika.stiller@univie.ac.at

https://displacement-and-migration-regimes.univie.ac.at/