This article aims to shed light on how Nazi collaborators’ transnational encounters and exchanges generated attitudes and outlooks that are different and more diverse than those that one would be able to find when focusing solely on the issue of reintegration from the perspective of the nation-state framework. Military service in the German forces produced significant reconfigurations in the sense of identity and belonging of these non-German Nazis. Highlighting the Dutch example, we argue that such far-reaching experiences strongly affected the position to which these people aspired in the restored post-war nation-state. We will demonstrate their ambition to adapt their own outlook in some respects to the guiding principles of their libera...
The historicization of national identity has become a focal point in Western European debates on cul...
A New Historiography of the Collaboration In this issue, four young historians present the results ...
This article focuses on two migrant groups in the Netherlands, one in which the majority is naturali...
This article aims to shed light on how Nazi collaborators’ transnational encounters and exchanges ge...
During WWII, the Nazi-leadership inevitably used the services of ‘foreigners’ for its expansionist a...
During WWII, the Nazi-leadership inevitably used the services of ‘foreigners’ for its expansionist a...
Recent historiography on Nazism has taken what has been coined ‘the imperial turn’. The key issue at...
The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) possessed a transnational resonance that echoed far beyond the bor...
‘The Fight for Amsterdam’. A New Approach in Research into the NSBThe main characteristics of the me...
The main characteristics of the members of the Dutch Nazi-movement (Nationaal- Socialistische Bewegi...
Migration experts see ‘transnationalism’ as a new feature of international migration. Immigrants ten...
‘Only and Exclusively in this Case’. Pleas for the Release of Former Collaborators after the Second ...
This article reflects on the mass influx of Dutch migrants into Australia after the Second World War...
This article looks into what happened to the children of Dutch Nazi collaborators after the liberati...
In 2012 the NIOD will conclude the research program Legacies of collaboration: the integration and e...
The historicization of national identity has become a focal point in Western European debates on cul...
A New Historiography of the Collaboration In this issue, four young historians present the results ...
This article focuses on two migrant groups in the Netherlands, one in which the majority is naturali...
This article aims to shed light on how Nazi collaborators’ transnational encounters and exchanges ge...
During WWII, the Nazi-leadership inevitably used the services of ‘foreigners’ for its expansionist a...
During WWII, the Nazi-leadership inevitably used the services of ‘foreigners’ for its expansionist a...
Recent historiography on Nazism has taken what has been coined ‘the imperial turn’. The key issue at...
The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) possessed a transnational resonance that echoed far beyond the bor...
‘The Fight for Amsterdam’. A New Approach in Research into the NSBThe main characteristics of the me...
The main characteristics of the members of the Dutch Nazi-movement (Nationaal- Socialistische Bewegi...
Migration experts see ‘transnationalism’ as a new feature of international migration. Immigrants ten...
‘Only and Exclusively in this Case’. Pleas for the Release of Former Collaborators after the Second ...
This article reflects on the mass influx of Dutch migrants into Australia after the Second World War...
This article looks into what happened to the children of Dutch Nazi collaborators after the liberati...
In 2012 the NIOD will conclude the research program Legacies of collaboration: the integration and e...
The historicization of national identity has become a focal point in Western European debates on cul...
A New Historiography of the Collaboration In this issue, four young historians present the results ...
This article focuses on two migrant groups in the Netherlands, one in which the majority is naturali...