Abstract

Informed by Didier Fassin’s concept of humanitarian government, this article reveals a distinct pattern of secret care provisions imposed under Stalin by the secret police and its successor agencies (NKVD, MVD) first to the peasant children displaced by class war and the famine of 1932–33, and then to the children made homeless by the Great Terror and the 1940s’ national deportations. The article also identifies the under-researched reception centres as crucial sites for both administering emergency assistance and establishing the social classification necessary to apply these discriminatory measures. Affected by the decreasing faith in their possible socialist rehabilitation and lack of any official display of compassion, these children’s lives appeared even less worthy of saving in the course of major emergencies. These findings challenge the official Soviet view of the existence of a universal childhood worth protecting, which guided the first socialist country’s intervention to save other children nationally and internationally.

Highlights

  • Class was central to the socialist worldview and experience

  • In March 1948, the head of the Department of Special Settlements instructed the Department for the Struggle against 25 Child Homelessness and Neglect that children of deported national groups had to receive local care placements and they could not be given to relatives outside the special settlements.[107] (Adoption was again ignored, even if it had recently been restored to care for war orphans).[108]

  • The Stalinist 40 state had only specific policy to deal with homeless children of its enemies, which reflected its distrust of their potential for growing up as loyal Soviet citizens

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Summary

Affiliation

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Introduction
Class war and child homelessness
40 The reception centres in Soviet child welfare
40 Class war and social policy
Conclusions
Findings
40 Acknowledgements
Full Text
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