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467 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 9 (1983)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0467 and id is 1 raw text is: PREFACE

Forty-four years ago, The Annals for the first time devoted an issue exclusively to
refugees. The impetus for that issue was the intensifying persecution of German and
Austrian Jews, the resultant emigration pressure, and the crisis occasioned when
most of the nations of the world systematically closed their borders. However,
despite the attention devoted to the worsening situation of actual and potential
refugees, the issue's editor, Francis S. Brown, insisted that
the attitude that the present is only a temporary crisis must give way to the recognition
of the fact-now abundantly recognized by the leaders in the field-that the refugee
problem is a permanent one.'
The other articles in that issue, devoted to such topics as the role that antagonism to
minorities plays in creating refugees, the burgeoning post-World War I refugee
population in Europe and Africa, the problematical legal status of refugees in the
face of restrictive national immigration policies, attempts to internationalize rescue
and resettlement, and the organizational and psychological difficulties associated
with resettlement provided a framework for speaking of refugees in more general
terms.
The Holocaust demonstrated that the refugee problem, when exacerbated by
prejudice, isolationism, and restrictionism, could be incalculably worse than had
ever been imagined. The unending series of forced and politically motivated migra-
tions after World War II-migrations that continue today in the Middle East,
Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean
-demonstrated that the problem not only is permanent, but may be intensifying.
This issue of The Annals is devoted to the crisis in its present stage. It focuses on
policymaking, and on a decision-making universe that has changed substantially
since the 1930s, yet still retains many of its traditional features.
The initial articles define the current scope of the problem. Atle Grahl-Madsen
describes the additional legal protections that have been afforded refugees under
international law since 1945, but warns that current municipal practice, instead of
expanding these protections or fully implementing them, has responded to restric-
tionist sentiment with more restrictive laws and a diminished sense of responsibility
to asylum applicants. Meanwhile the refugee population continues to burgeon.
Aristide Zolberg argues that the continuing flow of new refugees is attributable in
part to a historical process of nation building that has deep historical roots, and
continues today with an augmented capacity to expel minorities. Earl Huyck and
Leon Bouvier examine the consequences of such nationalism, political strife in
much of the world, and other factors contributing to involuntary migration. Their
article catalogues recent refugee movements, points to possible future migrations,
and examines the demographic effects of current and projected flow.
1. Francis J. Brown, Foreword, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social
Science, 203:xiv-xv (May 1939).

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