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ID161500
Title ProperTransgressing the Boundaries
Other Title Informationthe Migration of Uighurs into Soviet Central Asia After World War II
LanguageENG
AuthorTagirova, Alsu
Summary / Abstract (Note)After World War II, suffering from a severe workforce shortage and unprecedented economic devastation, the Soviet Union encouraged the immigration of Chinese citizens from Xinjiang into Soviet Central Asia. Despite the arbitrary behavior of local authorities, the immigrants were successfully integrated into Soviet society. But after 1963, many of the Chinese “defectors” began to be considered a threat to national security, and the KGB (Committee of State Security) arrested a good number of them. I argue that the Sino-Soviet split affected the mentality and immigration policies of the Soviet Union, much like current relations between China and the Central Asian states shape the attitude of the latter toward new arrivals from China. This article is based on research in the Kyrgyz and Kazakh archives.
`In' analytical Note
Asian Perspectives Vol. 42, No.4; Oct-Dec 2018: p.575-596
Journal SourceAsian Perspectives Vol: 42 No 4
Key WordsMigration ;  Central Asia ;  Xinjiang ;  Sino-Soviet relations ;  Uighurs


 
 
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