Episode 2. Matthew Frank: Minority Protection and Population Transfers in interwar Europe by BASEES Podcasts published on 2021-10-08T13:15:43Z In this episode, Matthew Frank, Associate Professor in International History at the University of Leeds talks to Michal Frankl, principal investigator of the ERC-funded project “Unlikely refuge? Refugees and citizens in East-Central Europe in the 20th century” at the Masaryk Institute and Archive of the Czech Academy of Sciences about the mass displacement of minority populations in interwar Europe. Focussing primarily on the ideologies and actions of governments and international organizations, Matthew considers how such population transfers concurred with the nascent minority protection regime set out by the League of Nations and came to be widely accepted as a state-building mechanism for the newly established nation-states of Eastern Europe. “Unlikely refuge? Refugees and citizens in East-Central Europe in the 20th century” https://www.unlikely-refuge.eu/ Matthew Frank, Making Minorities History. Population Transfer in Twentieth-Century Europe (Oxford UP, 2017): https://global.oup.com/academic/product/making-minorities-history-9780199639441?cc=ua&lang=en& "Eastern Europe's Minorities in a Century of Change", a podcast series on the history of minorities and minority experiences in twentieth-century Central and Eastern Europe prepared by the BASEES Study Group for Minority History to mark the Institute for Historical Research’s centenary. The co-conveners of the Study Group are Olena Palko (Birkbeck) and Samuel Foster (University of East Anglia) Genre Learning