Description

Book Synopsis

Julius George Stephen Fein examines the French response to the large number of German refugees between 1933 to 1938. Fein demonstrates how the Quai d’Orsay sought a compromise between the Republican canon which said France must help the persecuted and the factors which limited its willingness to accept refugees, including economic depression, anti-Semitism, anti-German sentiment, and mass unemployment.



Trade Review

Julius George Stephen Fein has produced a meticulously researched, balanced, and authoritative analysis of French policy towards refugees from Nazi Germany before the outbreak of the Second World War. He also tells a moving story, not least because of his examination of the refugees themselves.

-- David Stevenson, London School of Economics and Political Science

This book has excellent internal insight on how the French state reacted towards the influx of refugees from Nazi Germany in the 1930s. Fein shows us that the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs was an important actor not only in protecting refugees in France, but also in securing an international refugee regime—a regime which left us with concepts, such as country of first settlement and non-refoulement, essential to contemporary refugee policy.

-- Frank Caestecker, University of Ghent

Fein has written an extraordinary book on an extraordinary subject: the willingness of the French alone among the Western democracies to accept large numbers of Jewish refugees from Germany in the 1930s. It is a book that not only examines a vital episode in the history of migrants and the judicial, racial, ideological and economic reactions to them, but which also casts interwar France in a better light than is usual in history books covering this period. Fein is to be congratulated for producing a highly original, superbly researched, and well-written study.

-- Alan Sked, professor emeritus, London School of Economics and Politics

How to resolve the migrant problem? This question, current today, had already arisen in the 1930s in connection with the German Jews fleeing the Nazi regime. Thanks to a vast amount of well-mastered documentation, Fein describes the attitude of France, and in particular of the Quai d’Orsay, to the arrival of these immigrants between 1933 and 1938. This original approach to a delicate problem—how to reconcile the ideals of human rights with the political reality—is handled with skill and common sense. It is a success.

-- Maurice Vaïsse, professor emeritus, Paris Institute of Political Studies

I was delighted to be able to give Fein access to my great-grandfather Louis Oungre’s archives and to be able to contribute to this duty of remembrance which seems essential to me. Immigration is at the heart of Europe's concerns today, proof that history is repeating itself and that it is important to be aware of it. Congratulations to Fein for his accomplished work.

-- Virginie Tissinié, great-granddaughter of Louis Oungre

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: The Circumstances

Chapter 2: The Quay d’Orsay

Chapter 3: The Refugees

Chapter 4: Definitions

Chapter 5: Debating Human Rights

Chapter 6: Minorities and Intervention

Chapter 7: Pressure Groups

Chapter 8: The High Commission for Refugees (Jewish and Other) coming from Germany

Chapter 9: Resettlement and Transit

Chapter 10: International Agreements

Chapter 11: Evian

Hitler's Refugees and the French Response,

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    A Hardback by Julius Fein

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      View other formats and editions of Hitler's Refugees and the French Response, by Julius Fein

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 01/03/2021
      ISBN13: 9781793622280, 978-1793622280
      ISBN10: 1793622280

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Julius George Stephen Fein examines the French response to the large number of German refugees between 1933 to 1938. Fein demonstrates how the Quai d’Orsay sought a compromise between the Republican canon which said France must help the persecuted and the factors which limited its willingness to accept refugees, including economic depression, anti-Semitism, anti-German sentiment, and mass unemployment.



      Trade Review

      Julius George Stephen Fein has produced a meticulously researched, balanced, and authoritative analysis of French policy towards refugees from Nazi Germany before the outbreak of the Second World War. He also tells a moving story, not least because of his examination of the refugees themselves.

      -- David Stevenson, London School of Economics and Political Science

      This book has excellent internal insight on how the French state reacted towards the influx of refugees from Nazi Germany in the 1930s. Fein shows us that the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs was an important actor not only in protecting refugees in France, but also in securing an international refugee regime—a regime which left us with concepts, such as country of first settlement and non-refoulement, essential to contemporary refugee policy.

      -- Frank Caestecker, University of Ghent

      Fein has written an extraordinary book on an extraordinary subject: the willingness of the French alone among the Western democracies to accept large numbers of Jewish refugees from Germany in the 1930s. It is a book that not only examines a vital episode in the history of migrants and the judicial, racial, ideological and economic reactions to them, but which also casts interwar France in a better light than is usual in history books covering this period. Fein is to be congratulated for producing a highly original, superbly researched, and well-written study.

      -- Alan Sked, professor emeritus, London School of Economics and Politics

      How to resolve the migrant problem? This question, current today, had already arisen in the 1930s in connection with the German Jews fleeing the Nazi regime. Thanks to a vast amount of well-mastered documentation, Fein describes the attitude of France, and in particular of the Quai d’Orsay, to the arrival of these immigrants between 1933 and 1938. This original approach to a delicate problem—how to reconcile the ideals of human rights with the political reality—is handled with skill and common sense. It is a success.

      -- Maurice Vaïsse, professor emeritus, Paris Institute of Political Studies

      I was delighted to be able to give Fein access to my great-grandfather Louis Oungre’s archives and to be able to contribute to this duty of remembrance which seems essential to me. Immigration is at the heart of Europe's concerns today, proof that history is repeating itself and that it is important to be aware of it. Congratulations to Fein for his accomplished work.

      -- Virginie Tissinié, great-granddaughter of Louis Oungre

      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1: The Circumstances

      Chapter 2: The Quay d’Orsay

      Chapter 3: The Refugees

      Chapter 4: Definitions

      Chapter 5: Debating Human Rights

      Chapter 6: Minorities and Intervention

      Chapter 7: Pressure Groups

      Chapter 8: The High Commission for Refugees (Jewish and Other) coming from Germany

      Chapter 9: Resettlement and Transit

      Chapter 10: International Agreements

      Chapter 11: Evian

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