Abstract

Abstract This article explores how Dortmund’s municipal government propagated a concept of city-citizenship and belonging for new arrivals by mediating between expellee, refugee and migrant communities and ‘native’ civil society in the 1940s-1950s. The devastation of Dortmund during the Second World War, and the housing and energy shortages that followed, meant that the arrival of over a hundred thousand expellees and refugees in 1945–1960 placed severe strains on municipal resources while exacerbating conflicts between ‘native’ Dortmunders and new arrivals. The success of the Social Democratic Party (spd) in building a hegemonic position in postwar politics and administration by the late 1940s facilitated the coordination of municipal efforts to foster inter-community relations and introduce new populations to city life. Within the city council and government, in expellee meetings, and in municipal events we observe sustained municipal efforts to 1) exert social control over expellee/refugee arrivals to deflect anger at the poor conditions of the reconstruction period away from municipal officials and 2) inculcate taboos based on peace and democratic norms to delegitimise the politics of inter-community resentment. It concludes by tracing how official narratives and municipal practices constructed in the 1940s-50s were redeployed during the arrival of guest workers in the 1960s.

Highlights

  • In March 1950, Dortmund’s city bulletin celebrated the birth of a baby girl in an article titled ‘Dortmund has again its 500,000th inhabitant.’[1]

  • The visit coincided with a semantic shift in the Federal Republic of Germany, as the term ‘expellee’ gained ground to differentiate migrants who had been forced to leave Central-Eastern Europe and ‘refugees’ whose reasons for migration were more diverse and open tointerpretation.[2]

  • Five years after the Second World War, city leaders celebrated a birth to a refugee family, the 500,000th resident of postwar Dortmund, as a symbol of the city’s rebirth

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Summary

Introduction

In March 1950, Dortmund’s city bulletin celebrated the birth of a baby girl in an article titled ‘Dortmund has again its 500,000th inhabitant.’[1]. This article explores how Dortmund officials negotiated a postwar concept of city-citizenship and belonging for new arrivals by mediating between expellee, refugee and migrant communities and ‘native’ civil society in the 1940s-1950s.

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