Cold War Refugees

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Anti-Communism
Border
Category=NHF
Cold War
Communism
Decolonization
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eq_history
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Occupation
Partition
Propaganda
Refugees
Repatriation

Product details

  • ISBN 9781503643130
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Aug 2025
  • Publisher: Stanford University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Scenes of refugees fleeing Communist countries have created iconic images of the Cold War in Asia. Despite their symbolic prominence, the experiences and trajectories of these refugees have remained relatively obscure in Cold War history and global refugee studies. Featuring contributions from Phi-Vân Nguyen, Dominic Meng-Hsuan Yang, Yumi Moon, Ijlal Muzaffar, Robert D. Crews, Sabauon Nasseri, and Aishwary Kumar, Cold War Refugees meticulously investigates and connects cases across East, Southeast, and South Asia. Offering a transnational and transimperial perspective, this book illuminates the massive mobility of refugee populations across Asia and emphasizes the critical roles of artificial borders, displacement, and violence in shaping the global Cold War.

Drawing from multilingual archival sources, the authors explore the local, regional, and global contexts of displacement through five cases: Taiwan, Vietnam, Korea, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. They examine the agendas, identities, and cultures of the refugees who left their homes due to revolutions or wars amid the conflict between the US and the USSR, presenting them as historical actors rather than mere subjects of legal, governmental, or humanitarian discourse. By revisiting key Cold War events in Asia, the book provides a critical revision of Cold War history through the lens of refugee experiences and agency.

Yumi Moon is Associate Professor of History at Stanford University. She is the author of Populist Collaborators The Ilchinhoe and the Japanese Colonization of Korea, 1896–1910 (2013).