Michal Frankl and Lidia Zessin-Jurek (Unlikely Refuge?) co-authored a short article titled “Desperate Situation of Refugees in the Polish-Belarusian Borderland Brings Back Gloomy Memories of the 1939 Limbo.” The text was published online in Czech by Deník N on 27 September 2021. You can access it here.
Monthly Archives: September 2021
International Conference of SKÖTH on 16 & 17.9.2021 Austria and the Czech Republic as Immigration Countries: Transnational Labor Migration since 1780 in Historical Comparison Location: Institute for Eastern European History, University of Vienna, Campus, Hörsaal Spitalgasse 2/ Hof 3/ Eingang 3.2; 1090 Wien Please find the conference report on H-Soz-Kult. […]
Michal Frankl (Principal Investigator of the Unlikely Refuge?) joined as a keynote speaker the “Borderlands of Memory: Nationalism, Religion and Violence in Europe” 4EU+ Summer School 2021. His presentation was titled “No Man’s Land: Space and statelessness in East-Central Europe at the end of the 1930s.” The “Borderlands of Memory: Nationalism, Religion […]
Lidia Zessin-Jurek (Unlikely Refuge?) wrote an article titled “Polish refugees in no man’s land. When the borderline was a legal vacuum” (in Polish Polscy uchodźcy na ziemi niczyjej. Gdy linia graniczna była próżnią prawa). The text, which deals with refugees trapped in no man’s land on the German-Soviet border in […]