In June 1935, Edith Roll, a thirteen-year-old from Vienna, wrote to her Australian pen-pal, Jean Doig, aged ten. This correspondence was tragically short-lived. Edith Roll’s family was swept up in the murder and destruction of Jews in Europe. The efforts of Jean’s parents – the respected country doctor, Keith Doig, and his wife, Louie – who attempted but failed to assist Edith and her family, her father, Jakob Roll, her mother Emilie and brother Fritz, are examined in this article. To disregard their efforts as tangential to the history of refugees because they were unsuccessful means we miss an opportunity to explore the historically situated notions of compassion and empathy that can be at the centre of these endeavours. Drawing on person...
In 1953 Dr Jean Martin went to live in a Migrant Hostel in {u2018}Burton{u2019},' the name she gives...
The mass immigration of displaced persons (DPs) to Australia after the Second World War generated th...
This article explores the efforts by Aileen Fitzpatrick, the Australian social worker, who repatriat...
In June 1935, Edith Roll, a thirteen-year-old from Vienna, wrote to her Australian pen-pal, Jean Doi...
In 1959, the United Nations (UN) proclaimed the year 1959–60 World Refugee Year (WRY). The aim of WR...
This article considers the response in Australia to two international events that involved humanitar...
Between 1957 and 1968, the Prime Minister Robert Menzies and several of his ministers, including Ale...
Article first published online: 10 JUN 2014When Australia pledged to accept 15,000 Jewish refugees f...
The Australian government has long been involved in creating, collecting and circulating photographs...
The Bangladesh Liberation War against West Pakistan in 1971 triggered an exodus of ten million refug...
This paper explores the establishment of the Foster Parents Plan of Australia (PLAN) in 1971, a bran...
In 1986, Margaret Humphreys, a social worker from Nottingham, received a letter from a former child ...
Between 1938 and 1960, over 31,000 Jewish refugees found a new home in Australia, at no cost to gove...
The ‘displaced persons’ (DPs) from Eastern Europe, including the Soviet Union, whom Australia took i...
In 1953 Dr Jean Martin went to live in a Migrant Hostel in {u2018}Burton{u2019},' the name she gives...
The mass immigration of displaced persons (DPs) to Australia after the Second World War generated th...
This article explores the efforts by Aileen Fitzpatrick, the Australian social worker, who repatriat...
In June 1935, Edith Roll, a thirteen-year-old from Vienna, wrote to her Australian pen-pal, Jean Doi...
In 1959, the United Nations (UN) proclaimed the year 1959–60 World Refugee Year (WRY). The aim of WR...
This article considers the response in Australia to two international events that involved humanitar...
Between 1957 and 1968, the Prime Minister Robert Menzies and several of his ministers, including Ale...
Article first published online: 10 JUN 2014When Australia pledged to accept 15,000 Jewish refugees f...
The Australian government has long been involved in creating, collecting and circulating photographs...
The Bangladesh Liberation War against West Pakistan in 1971 triggered an exodus of ten million refug...
This paper explores the establishment of the Foster Parents Plan of Australia (PLAN) in 1971, a bran...
In 1986, Margaret Humphreys, a social worker from Nottingham, received a letter from a former child ...
Between 1938 and 1960, over 31,000 Jewish refugees found a new home in Australia, at no cost to gove...
The ‘displaced persons’ (DPs) from Eastern Europe, including the Soviet Union, whom Australia took i...
In 1953 Dr Jean Martin went to live in a Migrant Hostel in {u2018}Burton{u2019},' the name she gives...
The mass immigration of displaced persons (DPs) to Australia after the Second World War generated th...
This article explores the efforts by Aileen Fitzpatrick, the Australian social worker, who repatriat...