Laura RobsonHuman Capital
A History of Putting Refugees to Work
Laura Robson is the Oliver-McCourtney Professor of History at Penn State University and a recent Fellow at the Wilson Center in Washington, D.C. She has written and edited five books on Middle Eastern and global history, including most recently The Politics of Mass Violence in the Middle East (2020) and Partitions: A Transnational History of Twentieth Century Territorial Separatism (with Arie Dubnov, 2019). She is co-founder and co-editor of StatelessHistories.org.
Introduction: Refugees, Workers
1. What’s a Refugee Regime? The Origins of Mass Displacement Policy
2. Turning a Profit: Refugee Policy at the League of Nations
3. Colonial Workers: Expanding the Refugee Regime
4. From Europe to America: Refugees and the Politics of "Overpopulation"
5. Zionism Goes Global: Refugees and Roosevelt’s M Project
6. Workers of Another World: Soviet Resettlement Policy
7. Refugees versus "Palestine Refugees": Race and the Postwar International
Regime
8. The Politics of Confinement: Refugee Aid in the Age of Decolonization
9. Containing Labor: Refugees, Migrants, SEZs
Afterword: Workers, Refugees
Acknowledgements
Notes
Index