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Smugglers, Migrants, and Refugees: The Iran–Iraq Border, 1925–1975
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2020
Abstract
Due to the illegal movement of goods and people, the Khuzistan-Basra frontier, like many other borderlands in the region, represented a liminal space for border dwellers and the Iranian state. Although scholars have written about the migration that was endemic to the early nation-building period, the consequences of this movement in the latter half of the 20th century require further exploration. Well into the 1970s, Iranian migrants and border dwellers complicated citizenship, evinced by the Pahlavi monarchy's failure or refusal to offer them their rights. The Iranian archives prove that, decades into the nation-building project, local dynamics continued to exert tremendous influence on Iranians and even superseded national policies.
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References
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3 The war, of course, has its own robust historiography. Lawrence Potter's Gulf/2000 project is perhaps the most pioneering in its methodological scope. In the words of Lawrence Potter and Gary Sick, the “project has, over the past decade, brought together citizens of the Persian Gulf states to explore their mutual concerns and to seek ways to improve personal contact and understanding”; Iran, Iraq, and the Legacies of War (New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2004), 1Google Scholar. The topic of the war gains tremendous attention in biographies of Saddam Hussein and Ayatollah Khomeini, of which there are many. There is still much to study on the topic of the war itself, however. Pierre Razoux has written one of the most ambitious books on the topic recently, called The Iran–Iraq War (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2015)Google Scholar. William Murray and Kevin Woods, who published their own monograph by the same title only a year prior, offer an impressive chronicle of the military history of the war; The Iran–Iraq War: A Military and Strategic History (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2014)Google Scholar. One of the most dynamic studies of the conflict, a social history centering on the Ba‘th Party's citizen-regime relationship, is Khoury's, Dina Iraq in Wartime: Soldiering, Martyrdom, and Remembrance (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Cultural histories like the volume edited by Milich, Stephan, Pannewick, Friederike, and Tramontini, Leslie, Conflicting Narratives: War, Trauma, and Memory in Iraqi Culture (Wiesbaden: Reichert Verlag, 2012)Google Scholar have supplemented our understanding of the conflict. From the Iranian perspective, historians emphasize the religious element of the war. Surdykowska's, Sylwia Martyrdom and Ecstasy: Emotion Training in Iranian Culture (Warsaw: Warsaw University, 2006)Google Scholar is one such example.
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64 Ibid.
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84 Ibid., 62.
85 Ibid., 24.
86 Ibid., 26.
87 Ibid., 82.
88 Ibid., 93, 101.
89 Ibid., 25.
90 Ibid., 33.
91 Ibid., 32, 34.
92 Ibid., 29.
93 Nevertheless, loans were offered to refugee entrepreneurs. Those who settled in Isfahan and Khuzistan gained the highest number of bank loans. Ibid., 47.
94 Purtaya, Iranian Bazgashteh az Iraq, 94.
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102 Brubaker, Citizenship and Nationhood, 3.
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