This article looks at Britain’s response to the World Refugee Year (1959–60), and in particular the government’s decision to allow entry to refugees with tuberculosis and other chronic illnesses. In doing so, it broke the practice established by the 1920 Aliens’ Order which had barred entry to immigrants with a range of medical conditions. This article uses the entry of these sick refugees as an opportunity to explore whether government policy represented as much of a shift in attitude and practice as contemporary accounts suggested. It argues for the importance of setting the reception of tubercular and other ‘disabled’ refugees in 1959–61 in its very particular historical context, showing it was a case less of the government thinking diff...
The dissertation that follows offers the first historical examination of the nineteenth-century orig...
This article examines the scope of international instruments providing refugee protection, from the ...
The purpose of my study was the demonstrate the vastly different attitudes that evolved in countries...
This article looks at Britain’s response to the World Refugee Year (1959–60), and in particular the ...
This article traces the United Kingdom’s tepid response to the recent refugee crisis confronting Eur...
The twentieth century has aptly been referred to the century of the refugee.1 In the twentieth centu...
Our research shows that when it comes to immigration simply proposing ever more punitive measures wo...
The notion of humanitarian government has been increasingly employed to describe the simultaneous an...
From Crossref journal articles via Jisc Publications RouterScholars are increasingly interested in a...
From Crossref journal articles via Jisc Publications RouterScholars are increasingly interested in a...
From Crossref journal articles via Jisc Publications RouterScholars are increasingly interested in a...
This article looks back to the 1920s, and tries to tease out the politics of refugee protection as i...
The aim of this paper is to examine the changed nature of refugee movements over time; to place the ...
Scholars are increasingly interested in and concerned with both the way various migrant populations ...
This issue of Displaced Voices, published during Refugee Week, reflects on the 70th anniversary of b...
The dissertation that follows offers the first historical examination of the nineteenth-century orig...
This article examines the scope of international instruments providing refugee protection, from the ...
The purpose of my study was the demonstrate the vastly different attitudes that evolved in countries...
This article looks at Britain’s response to the World Refugee Year (1959–60), and in particular the ...
This article traces the United Kingdom’s tepid response to the recent refugee crisis confronting Eur...
The twentieth century has aptly been referred to the century of the refugee.1 In the twentieth centu...
Our research shows that when it comes to immigration simply proposing ever more punitive measures wo...
The notion of humanitarian government has been increasingly employed to describe the simultaneous an...
From Crossref journal articles via Jisc Publications RouterScholars are increasingly interested in a...
From Crossref journal articles via Jisc Publications RouterScholars are increasingly interested in a...
From Crossref journal articles via Jisc Publications RouterScholars are increasingly interested in a...
This article looks back to the 1920s, and tries to tease out the politics of refugee protection as i...
The aim of this paper is to examine the changed nature of refugee movements over time; to place the ...
Scholars are increasingly interested in and concerned with both the way various migrant populations ...
This issue of Displaced Voices, published during Refugee Week, reflects on the 70th anniversary of b...
The dissertation that follows offers the first historical examination of the nineteenth-century orig...
This article examines the scope of international instruments providing refugee protection, from the ...
The purpose of my study was the demonstrate the vastly different attitudes that evolved in countries...