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1981
Dis-Placed
  • ISSN: 2045-5895
  • E-ISSN: 2045-5909

Abstract

Migration is a natural tendency of human society. Solidification of the modern nation-state led to the regularized protection of states’ borders and territory and reduced the ability of migrants to negotiate their integration into a host society. The political and economic turmoil of the era following the First World War exacerbated the problematic relationships between the nation-state and migrants. Many migrants were excluded from the normal territorial and legal space of post-war global society and were categorized under a new political label as refugees. With the example of Russian Civil War (1918-21) refugees in Istanbul, the article investigates the process of constructing a refugee identity among these people. This included producing a refugee space, which was accomplished through imagining space as a resource, reimagining the meaning of Istanbul, constructing refugee camps, and engagement with the experience of the spatial hierarchy of Istanbul city life. I argue that the experience of Russian refugees in Istanbul after the First World War heavily contributed to the formation of today’s modern refugee regime.

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/content/journals/10.1386/ijia_00047_1
2021-07-01
2025-03-27
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References

  1. Saitov, Timur. ( 2021;), ‘ Constructing a Refugee Through Producing a Refugee Space: Russian Migrants in Occupied Istanbul (1919–22). ’, International Journal of Islamic Architecture, 10:2, pp. 337360, doi: https://doi.org/10.1386/ijia_00047_1
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