Matthew Frank is Associate Professor in International History at the University of Leeds. He is a graduate of the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London and St Antony's College, Oxford. He is the author of Expelling the Germans: British Opinion and Post-1945 Population Transfer in Context (2008) and has published widely on the diplomacy of displacement in twentieth-century Europe. He is currently one of the editors of the journal Contemporary European History.
* Prologue: The Curious Case of Clarence C. Hatry: Financier,
Frandster, and Migration Expert
* Introduction
* 1: 'The Crazy Quilt of Peoples and Nationalities': Nation-States and
National Minorities
* 2: The Good Doctors: The League of Nations and the
Internationalization of the Minorities Problem
* 3: 'A New International Morality': European Dictatorships and the
Reordering of Nationalities
* 4: Defenders of Minorities: Liberal Internationalists, Jews, and
Planning for the Brave New World
* 5: Defenders of the State: Czechs, Eastern Measures, and European
Exiles
* 6: 'A Clean Sweep': The Grand Alliance and Population Transfer
* 7: Accomplished Facts: Transfer and the Aftermath of the Second World
War
* 8: A Paris Affair: The Post-War Limits of Population Transfer
* 9: Afterlives: Population Transfer in an Era of Human Rights
* Conclusion