Cossack displaced persons who were re-settled in Australia as part of the post-war International Refugee Organisation scheme had already survived several turbulent eras. Anti-Bolshevik Cossacks refashioned their identities in the post-Civil War period as Russian émigrés and then, during the Second World War, as anti-Soviet collaborators of the Germany Army. At war’s end these Cossacks were rounded up by the British and handed to the Soviets. This paper traces the traumatic (and opportunistic) migration trajectory of one Cossack family, who escaped forced repatriations to become ‘New Australians’
Since the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the beginning of the war in Donbas, Eastern Europ...
During the Second World War, Nazi and Soviet governments had distinctly different ideologies as well...
First published online: 08 June 2020After the end of World War II, the welfare workers of the United...
Cossack displaced persons who were re-settled in Australia as part of the post-war International Ref...
This book revisits Australian histories of refugee arrivals and settlement – with a particular focus...
The ‘displaced persons’ (DPs) from Eastern Europe, including the Soviet Union, whom Australia took i...
In the wake of the Second World War, Soviet displaced persons (DPs) from Europe and Russians displac...
The Cossack émigré as a sociohistoric phenomenon was created like result of the emigration of a par...
During the Cold War, Australia accepted c.14,700 Russian refugees from China. This thesis consi...
Though Soviet Displaced Persons (DPs) resettled in Australia in the post-war period were usually str...
This article raises questions regarding the ethno-cultural identity of early Russian emigres in Aust...
The project has explored the trajectories of Russian and Russian-speaking refugees who came to Austr...
In the early 1950s, the Soviet Union made great efforts to persuade its former citizens among the “d...
The mass immigration of displaced persons (DPs) to Australia after the Second World War generated th...
Postwar Russian displaced persons arriving in Australia via the China route. This transnational proj...
Since the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the beginning of the war in Donbas, Eastern Europ...
During the Second World War, Nazi and Soviet governments had distinctly different ideologies as well...
First published online: 08 June 2020After the end of World War II, the welfare workers of the United...
Cossack displaced persons who were re-settled in Australia as part of the post-war International Ref...
This book revisits Australian histories of refugee arrivals and settlement – with a particular focus...
The ‘displaced persons’ (DPs) from Eastern Europe, including the Soviet Union, whom Australia took i...
In the wake of the Second World War, Soviet displaced persons (DPs) from Europe and Russians displac...
The Cossack émigré as a sociohistoric phenomenon was created like result of the emigration of a par...
During the Cold War, Australia accepted c.14,700 Russian refugees from China. This thesis consi...
Though Soviet Displaced Persons (DPs) resettled in Australia in the post-war period were usually str...
This article raises questions regarding the ethno-cultural identity of early Russian emigres in Aust...
The project has explored the trajectories of Russian and Russian-speaking refugees who came to Austr...
In the early 1950s, the Soviet Union made great efforts to persuade its former citizens among the “d...
The mass immigration of displaced persons (DPs) to Australia after the Second World War generated th...
Postwar Russian displaced persons arriving in Australia via the China route. This transnational proj...
Since the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the beginning of the war in Donbas, Eastern Europ...
During the Second World War, Nazi and Soviet governments had distinctly different ideologies as well...
First published online: 08 June 2020After the end of World War II, the welfare workers of the United...