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FLEMING, MICHAEL (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   099837


Ethno-religious ambitions of the Roman Catholic Church and the ascendancy of communism in post-war Poland (1945–50) / Fleming, Michael   Journal Article
Fleming, Michael Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract This paper differentiates between centrifugal and centripetal aspects of ethno-nationalism to help account for the ascendancy of communism in the immediate aftermath of World War II in Poland. It argues that the directing of social antipathy to defined out-groups allowed the Polish Workers' Party (PPR) to manage social anger and that the Roman Catholic Church's ethno-religious agenda was aligned with the PPR's ethno-nationalist policy. Furthermore, it is contended that the Church's toleration of hostile actions directed at minority communities supported the PPR's management of social anger. The paper concludes that the Church, despite its manifest intentions and contrary to contemporary perceptions, played a role in the PPR's achievement of hegemony.
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2
ID:   078562


Seeking labour's aristocracy? The ‘Westphalian incident’ and Polish nationality policy in the immediate aftermath of war / Fleming, Michael   Journal Article
Fleming, Michael Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract In the immediate aftermath of World War II the Polish state placed a high value on national homogeneity. The Polish Committee of National Liberation signed population exchange agreements with its socialist neighbours in September 1944 and expelled the German population who remained within the new Polish borders. Far less frequently discussed are the Polish state's efforts to persuade 'Poles' in Western Europe to move to Poland. This paper analyses how Polish policy towards 'Westphalian Poles' and the British reaction to Polish claims offer insight into both Polish and British nationality and citizenship policy in the immediate post-war period. I argue that the quality of potential labour played an important role in both British and Polish thinking. The paper also contends that the 'Westphalian incident' gives useful insights into the emergence of the Cold War
Key Words Poland  Post war  Nationality Policy  Cold War 
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