Panel Discussion
Learning from the Past? The Refugee Crisis in Historical Perspective
When : Mar 17, 2016 Venue : German Historical Institute, Washington DCLocation : Washington DC

Event description:

In the wake of the war in Syria and other crises in the Middle East, Central Asia, and Africa, the world is currently witnessing some of the largest movements of people seeking refuge since the end of World War II. Although politicians in Europe and North America tend to stress the singularity of the current "refugee crisis," the situation is by no means unprecedented. On this panel, historians and policy-experts will discuss the crucial question if and to what extent past mass migrations to Europe and North America provide lessons for the current refugee crisis.

This panel is part of the joint GHI, World Bank Group/KNOMAD, and German Embassy, Washington, DC, symposium "The Refugee Crisis: Historical Perspectives from Europe and North America, 1945-2000, taking place at the GHI on March 17, 2016.

Speakers

Speakers
Philipp Ackermann
Philipp Ackermann
  • Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany, Washington DC
Leo Lucassen
Leo Lucassen
  • International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam
Kathleen Newland
Kathleen Newland
  • Migration Policy Institute
Kirsten Schüttler
Kirsten Schüttler
  • The World Bank
Cathleen S. Fisher
Cathleen S. Fisher
  • Moderated by Cathleen S. Fisher
  • American Friends of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation