Covered tracks? Deportation as a historical blind spot in twentieth to twenty-first century Nordic countries

dc.contributor.authorTervonen, Miika
dc.contributor.authorVälimäki, Matti
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-05T20:30:00Z
dc.date.available2026-01-05T20:30:00Z
dc.date.issued2025-09-09
dc.descriptionThis article is published under a Creative Commons CC-BY license.
dc.description.abstractThe article addresses modern forms of deportation – that is, the forced removal of non-citizens from a state territory – as a significant but frequently overlooked part of the histories of nation building, migration control and international relations. The authors approach deportation in the twentieth to twenty-first centuries as primarily a tool of selective nation-building intimately tied up with the boundary drawing of the nation/welfare states and the rise of the international nation-state system. Through the case of Nordic history, the authors identify four long-term logics of forced removals that serve as heuristic tools in examining long-term continuities and changes in the practice of deportation: 1) socioeconomic selection; 2) deportation as a foreign-policy instrument; 3) racial/cultural gatekeeping; and 4) guarding the administrative power of the state. The article argues that scarcity of research on deportation specifically as a long-term phenomenon in the Nordic and broader European context hinge on non-transparent administrative processes, opaque record keeping and archiving, and the missing voices produced by the physical act of removing migrants from the nation-state’s territory. The authors suggest ways to address silences, including the use of oral history materials and reading administrative sources ‘against the grain’. More broadly, the article calls for an epistemological shift from a nation-state-centred perspective that has omitted those whom the state has disposed itself of.
dc.description.sponsorshipThe following research projects have contributed to the publishing of this article: ‘Gatekeeping the Nation: Deportation at Finnish Borderscapes from the Cold War to Europeanization’ (Research Council of Finland decision number 347906); ‘Centre of Excellence in Law, Identity and the European Narratives’ (Research Council of Finland, decision number 353311).
dc.identifier.citationTervonen, M., & Välimäki, M. (2025). Covered tracks? Deportation as a historical blind spot in twentieth to twenty-first century Nordic countries. European Review of History: Revue Européenne d’histoire, 1–26. https://doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2025.2525192
dc.identifier.issn1469-8293
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2025.2525192
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10315/43474
dc.publisherTaylor & Francis
dc.rightsAttribution 4.0 Internationalen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subjectDeportation
dc.subjectHistory
dc.subjectMigration control
dc.subjectPolitics of memory
dc.subjectNation-state
dc.subjectWelfare-state
dc.subjectNordic countries
dc.titleCovered tracks? Deportation as a historical blind spot in twentieth to twenty-first century Nordic countries
dc.typeArticle

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