<p><em>Forced Migrants in Nordic Histories</em> sheds light on the often-overlooked histories of forced migrants in Denmark Finland Iceland Norway and Sweden during the 20th and 21st centuries. It offers the first comparative region-wide volume focused specifically on the histories of refugees and other groups of forced migrants across the Nordic countries.</p><p>Nordic historiographies have long tended to marginalise or omit the presence of these migrants producing a perception of forced migration as something 'new' or 'exceptional'. This volume challenges that notion by uncovering the long and varied histories of forced migration within between to and from the Nordic region. In doing so it repositions forced migrants as integral to the shaping of Nordic societies.</p><p>The volume includes contributions from and about all the five Nordic countries. It examines both national specificities and shared regional patterns offering insights into how forced migration has been regulated remembered and represented in public discourses across borders.</p><p>The chapters engage with a wide range of forced migrant groups such as wartime evacuees refugees deportees Holocaust survivors and more recent asylum-seekers. Central to the volume is the recognition of forced migrants as historical actors. Drawing on oral histories personal testimonies and archival research the book foregrounds the agency of forced migrants themselves countering their frequent portrayal as passive or voiceless.</p><p>By tracing historiographical trends and shifting discourses regulatory frameworks and memory practices <em>Forced Migrants in Nordic Histories</em> contributes a vital historical dimension to contemporary debates on forced migration.</p>
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