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‘Unwilling’: The One-Word Revolution in Refugee Status, 1940–51

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 June 2014

ANDREW PAUL JANCO*
Affiliation:
The University of Chicago, 5720 South Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637, USA; [email protected]

Abstract

This article details the origins of the human right to international asylum. While previous works locate its beginnings in East–West political conflict in the 1950s, I note the importance of American opposition to the Soviet invasion of Poland and the Baltic countries in 1939–40 and its later consequences for relief work with post-war Displaced Persons from those countries. Given that Eastern European states at the UN claimed to protect people displaced from these non-recognised territories, British and American delegates were forced to create a new refugee definition that allowed DPs to reject state protections and to seek asylum as refugees.

‘ne veut se réclamer de la protection de ce pays’: une définition révolutionnaire du statut de réfugié, 1940–51

Cet article explique en détail l’origine du droit humain à l’asile international. Alors que les travaux précédents en placent l’origine dans le conflit Est-Ouest des années cinquante, je souligne l’importance de l’opposition américaine à l’invasion soviétique de la Pologne et des pays baltes en 1939–40 et ses conséquences ultérieures pour les activités humanitaires en faveur des personnes déplacées issues de ces pays. Étant donné que les états d’Europe de l’Est siégeant aux Nations Unies prétendaient protéger les personnes déplacées de ces territoires non reconnus, les délégués britanniques et américains ont été forcés de créer une nouvelle définition de réfugié qui permette aux personnes déplacées de rejeter la protection d’un état pour demander l’asile en tant que réfugiés.

‘den schutz dieses landes . . .nicht in anspruch nehmen will’: eine revolutionäre definition der rechtsstellung von flüchtlingen, 1940–51

Dieser Beitrag befasst sich mit den Ursprüngen des Menschenrechts auf internationales Asyl. Frühere Arbeiten siedeln die Anfänge dieses Konzepts im politischen Konflikt zwischen Ost und West in den fünfziger Jahren an. Der Autor weist in diesem Zusammenhang jedoch auf die Bedeutung des amerikanischen Widerstands gegen den sowjetischen Einmarsch in Polen und ins Baltikum in den Jahren 1939–40 und dessen Auswirkungen auf Hilfsmaßnahmen für Flüchtlinge und Vertriebene aus diesen Ländern nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg hin. Die in den Vereinten Nationen vertretenen osteuropäischen Staaten behaupteten, aus diesen nicht anerkannten Gebieten geflüchtete Personen zu schützen. Die britischen und amerikanischen Delegierten waren daher gezwungen, eine neue Definition des Begriffs ‘Flüchtling’ zu formulieren, die es solchen Personen erlaubte, den Schutz dieser Staaten abzulehnen und als Flüchtlinge Asyl zu beantragen.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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References

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22 For a detailed account of the origins of the British government's position, see Sjöberg, The Powers and the Persecuted, 210–14.

23 Inter-Governmental Committee on Refugees, Fifth Plenary Session (held in Paris), 22 Nov. 1945, TNA, FO 371/51139–0016.

24 George L. Warren, The Development of United State Participation in Intergovernmental Efforts to Resolve Refugee Problems, Box 2, 37, Papers of George L. Warren, Truman Presidential Archive, Independence, Missouri.

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27 United Nations, Official Records of the First Part of the First Session of the General Assembly, Third Committee, 56–7.

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29 Ibid. 54.

30 Proposal concerning Refugees submitted by the Delegation of the United States of America (A/C.3/20), 5 Feb. 1946, Official Records of the First Part of the First Session of the General Assembly, Third Committee, 56.

31 Ibid. 52.

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44 IRO Constitution, Annex I, Section C. For detailed discussion of IRO eligibility criteria in practice, see: Cohen, In War's Wake.

45 Special Committee on Refugees and Displaced Persons, Subcommittee on Definitions, Report of the Chairman (E/REF/65), 8 May 1946, TNA, FO 371/57708;0003.

46 Ibid. Given that the report was written by Rendel and was addressed to McNeil, the ‘United Kingdom Delegate’ must refer to Rendel.

48 Special Committee on Refugees and Displaced Persons, Subcommittee on Definitions, Report of the Chairman (E/REF/65), 8 May 1946, TNA, FO 371/57708;0003.

49 Report of the Special Committee on Refugees and Displaced Persons (E/REF/75), 1 Jun. 1946, TNA, FO 371/57712.

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51 Text of a Speech Delivered by A. V. Vyshinsky in Committee III of the General Assembly of the United Nations, 6 Nov. 1946 (Washington, DC: Embassy of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, 1946), 6.

52 IRO Constitution, Annex I: Definitions, Section A: Definition of Refugees, paragraph 2.

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54 UN, A Study of Statelessness.

55 United Kingdom: Draft Proposal for Article 1 (E/AV.32/2), 17 Jan. 1950, in Takkenberg and Tahbaz, Collected Travaux Préparatoires, 1:358.

56 Draft Brief for the United Kingdom representatives on the ad hoc Committee of E.C.O.S.O.C. on Refugees and Stateless Persons, 30 Dec. 1949, TNA, FO 371/87395. It should be noted that the copy of this document in the National Archives has ‘NO!!!’ written in ink beside this statement.

57 Paul Weis, ed., The Refugee Convention, 1951: The Travaux Préparatoires analysed, with a commentary by the late Dr Paul Weis (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 1–35. The French version reads ‘qui ne peut ou, du fait de cette crainte, ne veut se réclamer de la protection de ce pays’.

58 The main difference between the two definitions is that the persecution clause appears first in the Ad Hoc Committee definition rather than after the ‘result of events’ clause.

59 Texts of the Draft Convention and the Draft Protocol to be Considered by the Conference, 12 Mar. 1951, Collected Travaux Préparatoires, 3:157. The section with ‘unable or unwilling to avail’ appears here for the first time as Chapter 1, Article 1 A(2). This would be its final position in the Refugee Convention.

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