Available Formats
Occupiers, Humanitarian Workers, and Polish Displaced Persons in British-Occupied Germany
By (Author) Samantha K. Knapton
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
22nd August 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Refugees and political asylum
943.0874
Paperback
264
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Concepts of migration and displacement are all too often separated from ideas of international humanitarianism and occupations; and yet, between 1945 and 1951, victims of war became the joint responsibility of humanitarian workers and military officials in occupied Germany. In this innovative study, Samantha K. Knapton focuses on the lives of Polish displaced persons (DPs) one of the largest groups in occupied Germany to shine a spotlight on this interaction for the first time. From the everyday experience of clothing, feeding and sheltering to governmental policies and military actions, Occupiers, Humanitarian Workers and the Polish Displaced Persons in British-Occupied Germany investigates the impact of occupation on post-war refugees and explores how the birth of state-driven international humanitarianism played a vital role in both the identity of the Polish people and the reconstruction of Germany. To do so, Knapton fuses together archival material and personal collections such as memoirs, letters and diaries to present an account which considers both the macro and micro issues of displacement, occupation and humanitarianism. The result is a sophisticated analysis of Anglo-Polish-German relations in post-war Europe which will be of immense value to all scholars of modern Europe, Polish history, and displacement studies more generally.
This book provides an interesting insight into the interactions between Polish DPs in the British zone in Germany and the British occupying authorities and aid workers from UNRRA in the post-war period. Timely and important, there are parallels between that situation and what is happening now. * Myra Cross, Associate Lecturer at The Open University, UK *
Knapton has produced a convincing and well-researched analysis of the difficulties faced by international organizations and the British Military Government in attempting to ameliorate the living conditions of DPs and the reasons behind their inability to resolve the situation. In doing so, she has exposed the sheer inefficacy as well as the extent of discriminatory attitudes that were prevalent within UNRRA and the Military Government, while bringing to the fore the significant contribution of some individual humanitarian workers in providing care and relief. -- Camilo Erlichman * German History *
Samantha K. Knapton is Assistant Professor in History at the University of Nottingham, UK. She is the co-editor, along with Katherine Rossy, of Relief and Rehabilitation for a Postwar World: Humanitarian Intervention and the UNRRA (Bloomsbury Academic, 2023).