In 1933 the League of Nations had an office at its disposal, the Nansen Office for International Refugees, with the capacity and willingness to address the problem of German Jewish refugees. Instead it created the High Commissioner for Refugees Coming from Germany (Jewish and Other) that was both underfunded and inferior to the Nansen Office, as it was not affiliated with the League or funded by it. Why did the League not extend its protection to German Jewish refugees via the Nansen Office in 1933? This analysis uses the documents of James G. McDonald, High Commissioner from 1933-35 to explore two explanations: the early start of appeasement in the face of the German disarmament crisis and the effects of transnational anti-Semitism. The br...
The aftermath of World War I, the war to end all wars, left the world with as many new problems as...
The aim is to increase our understanding of the mechanisms of social categorization and discriminati...
The collection consists of copies of correspondence on the placement of German refugees from the off...
Greg Burgess’s important new study explores the short life of the High Commission for Refugees (Jewi...
The League of Nations’ effectiveness as a bureaucratic body has been hotly contested. Almost since i...
Greg Burgess\u27s important new study explores the short life of the High Commission for Refugees (J...
Dieser Überblick zum historischen Forschungsstand beschreibt die Dynamiken der Flüchtlingspolitik wä...
Initially liberal in its response to refugees from Nazism in 1933, France soon closed its borders to...
This article poses two main questions: Why could the Jews in Denmark successfully flee to Sweden? Wh...
This paper examines the role and scope of the American public’s opinion on European Jews in the 1930...
This article examines the position of the Stockholm Jewish community within Swedish society as it re...
On the climax of the so-called 'refugee crisis' in the fall of 2015 Germany, there was a competing s...
This research looks at Jewish migration out of German occupied territories from 1933 - 1941. It comp...
The article portrays and analyzes the choices and challenges for German Jews regarding the question ...
Recent scholarship has focused on the response of Jews in the free world to the plight of European J...
The aftermath of World War I, the war to end all wars, left the world with as many new problems as...
The aim is to increase our understanding of the mechanisms of social categorization and discriminati...
The collection consists of copies of correspondence on the placement of German refugees from the off...
Greg Burgess’s important new study explores the short life of the High Commission for Refugees (Jewi...
The League of Nations’ effectiveness as a bureaucratic body has been hotly contested. Almost since i...
Greg Burgess\u27s important new study explores the short life of the High Commission for Refugees (J...
Dieser Überblick zum historischen Forschungsstand beschreibt die Dynamiken der Flüchtlingspolitik wä...
Initially liberal in its response to refugees from Nazism in 1933, France soon closed its borders to...
This article poses two main questions: Why could the Jews in Denmark successfully flee to Sweden? Wh...
This paper examines the role and scope of the American public’s opinion on European Jews in the 1930...
This article examines the position of the Stockholm Jewish community within Swedish society as it re...
On the climax of the so-called 'refugee crisis' in the fall of 2015 Germany, there was a competing s...
This research looks at Jewish migration out of German occupied territories from 1933 - 1941. It comp...
The article portrays and analyzes the choices and challenges for German Jews regarding the question ...
Recent scholarship has focused on the response of Jews in the free world to the plight of European J...
The aftermath of World War I, the war to end all wars, left the world with as many new problems as...
The aim is to increase our understanding of the mechanisms of social categorization and discriminati...
The collection consists of copies of correspondence on the placement of German refugees from the off...