Abstract
Abstract
Approximately 70,000 people were displaced from Greece to Turkey and the Middle East during World War II. Following a presentation of the geography, statistics, and timeframe of the displacement, and Turkey’s interwar demographic policies, the article studies Turkey’s management of this refugee movement. Based on Greek, Turkish, and British archival material, the article argues that Turkish wartime refugee policy took shape in the intersection of two occasionally contradictory attributes. On the one hand, there were the state’s demographic desiderata and policies that differentiated incoming refugees on account of their ethnic and religious identities. On the other, Turkey’s reaction was necessarily conditioned by the military, political, and diplomatic conjuncture of the war. It was this conditionality that explains the inconsistences and shifts in refugee management and its rationale during the war, for instance, the differentiation in the treatment of Jewish and Christian refugees, but also in the management of Greek Muslims in 1941–1942 and in 1944–1945.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Sociology and Political Science,History,Cultural Studies
Reference60 articles.
1. Danacıoğlu, E (2006) II. Dünya Savaşı’nda Adalardan Türkiye’ye Mülteci Akını. Toplumsal Tarih 146, 50–55.
2. An enemy old and new: the Dönme, anti-Semitism, and conspiracy theories in the Ottoman Empire and Turkish Republic;Baer;Jewish Quarterly Review,2013
3. Sigalas, N and Toumarkine, A (eds) (2008) Demographic Engineering – Part I. European Journal of Turkish Studies 7, DOI: 10.4000/ejts.2073.
4. “If we hadn’t left … we would have all died”: escaping famine on the Greek island of Chios, 1941–44;Hionidou;Journal of Refugee Studies,2021