Cold War Austria and Migration from Eastern Europe: Refugees and Labor Migrants

Maximilian Graf
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Abstract

This article revisits Austria's migration history from the end of World War II until the end of the Cold War. Recent research has challenged the persistently commemorated welcoming Austrian attitude toward refugees who had been living under communism. The initial humanitarian efforts in 1956 and 1968, respectively, were remarkable. However, an analysis beyond the first weeks of both events reveals that (though to different degrees) public and political attitudes toward refugees took a negative turn. Throughout the 1970s, asylum for dissidents was portrayed as a continuation of the country's humanitarian tradition. However, in 1981, refugees from Poland were immediately perceived as unwanted labor migrants. In 1989/90, the scenario was similar: while the transiting East German refugees were welcomed, migrants from other countries (like Romania) were not. In the early 1990s, Austria decided on a reform of its asylum and foreigner policies. But when and why did the (supposedly welcome) refugees from countries under communist rule turn into unwelcome labor migrants? The analysis in this article explores the potential impact of the age of détente and the repercussions of the 1970s economic crises and the resulting end to active recruitment of foreign workers.
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冷战时期的奥地利与东欧移民:难民和劳工移民
本文重温了奥地利从二战结束到冷战结束的移民历史。最近的研究对奥地利一直以来对生活在共产主义下的难民的欢迎态度提出了质疑。分别于 1956 年和 1968 年开展的最初的人道主义工作令人瞩目。然而,对这两次事件最初几周之后的分析表明,公众和政治对难民的态度(尽管程度不同)出现了消极的转变。在整个 20 世纪 70 年代,对持不同政见者的庇护被描绘成国家人道主义传统的延续。然而,1981 年,来自波兰的难民立即被视为不受欢迎的劳工移民。1989/90 年的情况与此类似:过境的东德难民受到欢迎,而来自其他国家(如罗马尼亚)的移民却不受欢迎。20 世纪 90 年代初,奥地利决定改革其庇护和外国人政策。但是,来自共产党统治下国家的难民(本应受到欢迎)何时以及为何变成了不受欢迎的劳工移民?本文的分析探讨了缓和时代的潜在影响、20 世纪 70 年代经济危机的反响以及由此导致的停止积极招募外籍劳工。
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How to Get Away with Treachery, or: Actor-Centered Perspectives on Entangled Conflicts and their Urban Protagonists in the Austrian Duchy, 1462/63 Conflict Escalation Done Wrong? The Free City of Regensburg Seizes Ehrenfels Castle, 13 April 1417 John W. Boyer Austria, 1867–1955 Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022. Pp. xvi + 1,131. Cold War Austria and Migration from Eastern Europe: Refugees and Labor Migrants Theuerdank: The Illustrated Epic of a Renaissance Knight Edited by Howard Louthan; translated by Jonathan Green. London: Routledge, 2022. Pp. 324.
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