The allied occupation of Germany : the refugee crisis, denazification and the path to reconstruction / Francis Graham-Dixon.

Graham-Dixon, Francis, author.
London, England New York : I.B. Tauris, 2013.
Added to CLICnet on 11/02/2014


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Part of the series International library of twentieth century history 70;International library of twentieth century history 70.
Notes:

  • Includes bibliographical references (pages [316]-330) and index
  • Introduction — Occupation policy and German refugees : the case for revision — ‘Germanity and humanity’ — Realities of the occupation — A region in crisis : Schleswig-Holstein — Crisis compounded : German reaction and the impact on policy — Occupation policy and the civilising mission : a compromising legacy — The Janus faces of occupation , 1949-55 — Notes — Select bibliography — Index.
  • In the years following World War II, the allies occupied a shattered Germany. Britain held North-Western Germany for ten years, overseeing the rehabilitation of ‘the biggest single forced population movement in modern history’, as Germans from around Europe were expelled from the crumbling Third Reich. This was a humanitarian crisis — with most hospitals, houses, transport networks and schools destroyed during the war, and the British and Americans running enormous and often inhumane refugee camps. Here, Francis Graham-Dixon assesses how the British squared their ethical focus on liberalism with their status as an occupying power, and examines the economic, military and political pressures of the period through the key turning points of the end of World War II — the bombing of Hamburg in 1943, the mismanagement of the refugee camp system and the fallout between occupiers and occupied after the Nuremberg trials of 1945/6. The first book to compare German and British sources from the period, this is an essential contribution to the literature on World War II, the Cold War and post-war Europe. — Provided by publisher.

Subjects:

Requested by deVries, J

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