Before the Convention: The Spanish Civil War and Challenges for Research on Refugee History (original) (raw)

2022, Refugee Survey Quarterly

This article uses the tools of comparative history to address an important aspect of the Spanish Civil War: the fact that it generated waves of both internally displaced persons and cross-border refugees. Situating the conflict within the context of inter-war Europe, and particularly historical processes of deportation, forced migration, and exile, it analyses the challenges that the crisis of the war and subsequent postwar period in Spain introduced in the realm of humanitarian protection for displaced populations, and how existing international policies largely failed to protect those displaced by the conflict. Drawing on the Spanish Civil War example, the article shows how this kind of engagement with the history of refugees can produce insights that are useful for the broader body of scholarship on refugees, even for scholars who are not historians.

Qu’allons-nous faire des réfugiés espagnols? French reactions to Spanish Refugees

2022

The aim of this dissertation is to survey and analyse the response of the French government and French society to La Retirada - the name given to the exodus of half a million Spanish refugees into France after the fall of Catalunya between January and February 1939. Although refugees had sought asylum in France since the start of the Spanish Civil War, this thesis will mainly examine the events that followed La Retirada in 1939 but will also quickly recap the years before and after the event. While the author recognises that it is important to amplify refugee voices and share their experiences, this dissertation will for the most part focus on the reactions, and actions, of their host country. By analysing the response and how humanitarian and republican values were discarded at the time, it will help explain how countries behave when hit with a considerable wave of refugees, which we have also seen more recently.

Refugees - what's wrong with history?

This article outlines the current contours of refugee history and charts a way forward. It begins by asking what future historians will write about forced migration in and around the Mediterranean during 2015-16, and how such a history could entail ‘thinking through oceans’, not just the nation-state. Noting the absence of refugees from mainstream historiography, the article traces a history of population displacement in the modern world that is attentive to connections between the circumstances, actions and trajectories of refugees through time and space. This work takes account of histories of categorisation (‘making up people’) and changes over time to the refugee regime and to humanitarian aid. This broad matrix of relations and practices can be conceptualised as ‘refugeedom’. Given the focus of this special issue, protection is discussed in relation to institutional arrangements, but also to the meanings and forms of refugees’ self-protection in refugee camps. Finally, the article draws attention to refugees’ own engagement with history. Keywords: refugee history; refugeedom; Mediterranean; refugee regime; humanitarianism; protection; refugee camps

What is refugee history, now

Journal of Global History, 2021

Refugee history at present lacks a conceptual framework, notwithstanding the proliferation of recent contributions that contribute to enlarging the field. Our article seeks to advance refugee history by drawing upon extensive research into historical case studies and proposing the framework of refugeedom. Refugeedom takes proper account of the states and other actors that defined the 'refugee' as a category and sought to manage refugees as figures of concern, but it also insists upon the need to consider refugees as an active and assertive historical presence in situations of crisis and constraint. It offers a promising approach for analysing episodes and sites of mass population displacement from the perspectives of governments, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations. Crucially, refugeedom incorporates the experiences of refugees and how they narrated displacement. Finally, the article outlines a direction for global history by drawing attention to past episodes of displacement in ways that capture not only its global scale, but also the multiple relationships and practices of refugeedom.

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