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Forced migrations: pre-history and classification
Forced migrations before Hitler and Stalin: historical excursus
Forced migrations and Second World War
Classification of forced migrations
Part I. Forced migrations within the USSR
Forced migrations before the Second World War (1919-1939)
First Soviet deportations and resettlements in 1919-1929
Dekulakization and kulak exile in 1930-1931
Kulak exile and famine repercussions in 1932-1934
Frontier zone cleansing and other forced migrations in 1934-1939
Forced migrations during and after the Second World War (1939-1953)
Selective deportations from the annexed territories of Poland, Baltic Republics and Romania in 1939-1941
Total preventive deportation of Soviet Germans, Finns and Greeks in 1941-1942
Retributive total deportations of the peoples of the North Caucasus and Crimea in 1943-1944
Preventive forced deportations from the Transcaucasia, and other deportations during the last stage of the war in 1944-1945
Compensatory forced migrations in 1941-1946
Ethnic and other deportations after the Second World War, 1949-1953
Patterns of deported peoples settlement, and rehabilitation process
Patterns of deported peoples settlement at the destinations
Rehabilitation and internal repatriation of Kalmyks and peoples of the North Caucasus
Rehabilitation of Germans
Rehabilitation of the Crimean Tatars
Rehabilitation of Meshketian Turks
Repressed peoples and ethnic conflicts on the territory of the USSR in the 1990s
Part II. International forced migrations
Internment and deportation of German civilians from European countries to the USSR
The victors labor balance and labor reparations
Internment of Germans in Southeast Europe
Internment of Germans on the territory of the Third Reich
Some outcomes of the operation on internment of Germans
Employment of labor of German civilians from European countries in the USSR, and their repatriation
Destination geography and employment of labor of German internees in the USSR
Beginning of repatriation of internees, and new labor reparations
Further repatriation process and its completion
In lieu of a conclusion: geo-demographic scale and repercussions of forced migrations in the USSR
Afterword at the crossroads of geography and history (by Anatoly Vishnevsky).

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