Forced Migration, Staying Minorities, and New Societies: Evidence from Post-war Czechoslovakia

Jakub Grossmann, Š. Jurajda, Felix Roesel
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Forced migration traumatizes millions displaced from their homes, but little is known about the few who manage to stay and become a minority in a new society. We study the case of German stayers in Sudetenland, a region from which Czechoslovakia expelled ethnic Germans after World War Two. The unexpected presence of the US Army in parts of 1945 Czechoslovakia resulted in more anti-fascist Germans avoiding displacement compared to regions liberated by the Red Army. We study the long-run impacts of this local variation in the presence of left-leaning stayers and find that Communist party support and local party cell frequencies, as well as far-left values and social policies are more pronounced today where anti-fascist Germans stayed in larger numbers. Our findings also suggest that political identity supplanted German ethnic identity among anti-fascist stayers. The German staying minority shaped the political identity of newly formed local societies after ethnic cleansing by providing the ‘small seed’ of political development.
被迫迁移、保留少数民族和新社会:来自战后捷克斯洛伐克的证据
被迫迁移使数百万人流离失所,但很少有人知道那些设法留下来并在新社会中成为少数群体的人。我们研究了在苏台德地区的德国人的案例,这是捷克斯洛伐克在二战后驱逐德国人的地区。1945年,美国军队意外出现在捷克斯洛伐克的部分地区,与红军解放的地区相比,更多反法西斯德国人避免了流离失所。我们研究了左倾留留者存在的这种地方差异的长期影响,发现共产党的支持和当地政党的蜂窝频率,以及极左翼价值观和社会政策在反法西斯德国人数量较多的今天更为明显。我们的研究结果还表明,在反法西斯滞留者中,政治认同取代了德国民族认同。留在德国的少数民族通过提供政治发展的“小种子”,塑造了种族清洗后新形成的当地社会的政治认同。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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