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Grin Verlag

Immigrants from the Soviet Union to Germany: German late settlers and Jewish migrants and their integration

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Product Code: 9783640744275
ISBN13: 9783640744275
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Immigrants from the Soviet Union to Germany: German late settlers and Jewish migrants and their integration

$37.90
$37.25
Sale 2%
 
Seminar paper from the year 2010 in the subject History of Germany - Postwar Period, Cold War, grade: 3,0, Leiden University (Historisches Institut), course: Migration and integration, language: English, abstract: The fall of the Berlin wall and the reunification soon after was a significant event in the German history and the history of the 20th century in general. But due to the Cold War and the separation of the world into East and West after the end of World War II, there were still brownfields to work on that were left behind the iron curtain. One of these brownfields was the drawing of new German borders that came along with the formation of the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) and the German Democratic Republic (GDR), both in 1949. Parts of the former German empire were cut off. A large amount of German citizens fled then to the west, others did not and most of them had to stay in Poland or elsewhere further east until 1989. Even more than 50 years after the end of World War II they were still considered as Germans and had therefore the right to live in the mother country. The fact, that they might have been "sovietized" in the meantime did not matter. Another group that came along with these German late settlers was the Soviet Jews. Jews from the Soviet Union were invited to come to East Germany in 1990 shortly before the German reunification and the Federal Republic then held onto this invitation in order to let discriminated and persecuted Jews as refugees into Germany. In the following paper I would like to regard the integration process of these two groups. Due to the fact that their motives to leave home and their situation in the Soviet Union was similar to each other I will regard this group mainly as one and will then focuse on the situation that awaited them in the new Germany. I will work on legal aspects and their public reception aiming to study on the question whether their particular privileged status concerning legal acknowledgement and suppo


Author: Katharina Hoffmann
Publisher: Grin Verlag
Publication Date: Nov 09, 2010
Number of Pages: 30 pages
Binding: Paperback or Softback
ISBN-10: 3640744276
ISBN-13: 9783640744275
 

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