During and after World War II, millions of people in Central and
Eastern Europe were uprooted and deported from their ancestral
homelands in an unprecedented series of ethnic cleansings. The
expulsion of minorities created more homogenous states than had
previously existed in the region but caused massive social and
psychological problems that lasted for generations. These nine case
studies, written by Russian, German and Austrian scholars and based
on archival findings, should shed new light on deportations and
resettlement in Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Germany. The
introduction places forced migration throughout the region in a
broad historical context.
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