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A Century of Hungarian Emigration, 1850-1950
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 March 2019
Extract
The Mass Emigration of people from the various European states was not a haphazard chapter of history. Emigration represented a natural outcome of those social problems which beset many European countries for long periods. Grave social problems determined those ultimate motives which prompted large masses to leave behind the well-known boundaries of their native land to try their luck in a strange country. In the case of Hungary, too, the social and economic background makes emigration comprehensible. Such a background explains that strange turn of social history which suddenly transformed Hungary from a country of immigration into a country of emigration.
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- Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 1957
References
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8 It seems that an emigration permit remained a legal prerequisite all the time and that Law No. 38 of 1881 did not enact any innovation in this respect but only regulated an already existing administrative procedure.
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10 Laws No. 4 of 1903 and No. 2 of 1909.
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21 Because of several changes in her borders, Hungary included between 1938 and 1944 a considerable number of national minorities again.
22 As the term was used in Hungary, the “middle class” corresponded to the American upper-middle class.
23 Estimate of Prof. Julius Rezler (St. Francis College) in an unpublished paper on the Hungarian refugees.
24 Data collected by the author while working as statistical assistant with the IRO, Resettlement Office, Salzburg, Austria.
25 For information regarding the postwar migration, the author is indebted to Prof. Stephen Borsody (Chatham College), Mr. Imre Kovacs (Free Europe, Inc.) and Mr. Robert Major (New York City).
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