Humanitarian Protection for Prisoners of War and Refugees in the Long Aftermath of the First World War

Dublin Core

Title

Humanitarian Protection for Prisoners of War and Refugees in the Long Aftermath of the First World War

Subject

Humanitarian law,
Public international law

Description

At the end of WWI, millions of prisoners of war and civilians were displaced across Europe, the South Caucasus, and the Eastern Mediterranean. While many made their way home, genocide, revolution, and post-war instability delayed the repatriation of prisoners of war from Russia and the Central Powers, while Russian and Armenian refugees were forced into exile. In response to the inconsistent efforts of governments, a series of international organizations intervened.

Creator

Francesca Piana

Source

https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.12657/95479/9789400604629.pdf?sequence=1

Publisher

Leiden University Press

Date

2024

Contributor

Mustabsyirah

Rights

Creative Commons

Format

PDF

Language

English

Type

Textbooks

Files

Humanitarian Protection.jpg

Collection

Citation

Francesca Piana, “Humanitarian Protection for Prisoners of War and Refugees in the Long Aftermath of the First World War,” Open Educational Resource (OER) - USK Library, accessed January 31, 2026, http://oer.usk.ac.id/items/show/9295.

Document Viewer