ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- Introduction -- 1 Escape -- 2 Fortress Canada -- 3 Test Cases -- 4 The Door Ajar -- 5 No Safe Haven, 1947-1951 -- 6 Exceptions That Proved the Rule -- 7 The Diminishing Threat -- 8 The Era of Risk Management, 1951-1956 -- 9 Undiplomatic Passports -- Conclusions -- APPENDIX. IMMIGRATION SCREENING AS A RESEARCH PROBLEM: THE SOURCES AND THEIR LIMITATIONS -- NOTES -- SELECTED LIST OF PRIMARY SOURCES -- INDEX -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y
Summary
"In Unauthorized Entry, Howard Margolian absolves a succession of postwar governments of active complicity in the admission of ex-Nazis. Charges that Ottawa was indifferent to the problem are similarly discounted. In a departure from the conspiracy theories and the culture of historical victimization so prevalent nowadays, Margolian lays the blame where it belongs - on the war criminals themselves. Most, he points out, were Nazi collaborators who had escaped from eastern Europe or the Soviet Union, where evidence of their crimes remained inaccessible for almost fifty years. With no means to verify the statements given by these fraudulent refugee claimants, Canadian immigration authorities had to rely on their professional judgment and their instincts."--Jacket
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes
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English
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