A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Newly Digitized Database Reveals the Lives and Families of Forced Migrants from Finnish Karelia




AuthorsJohn Loehr, Robert Lynch, Johanna Mappes, Tuomas Salmi, Jenni Pettay, Virpi Lummaa

PublisherPopulation Research Institute

Publication year2017

JournalFinnish Yearbook of Population Research

Volume52

First page 59

Last page69

eISSN1796-6191

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.23979/fypr.65212

Web address https://doi.org/10.23979/fypr.65212

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/29271353


Abstract

Studies on displaced persons often suffer from a lack of data on the long-term effects of forced migration. A register created during 1960s and published as a book series ‘Siirtokarjalaisten tie’ in 1970 documented the lives of individuals who fled the southern Karelian district of Finland after its first and second occupation by the Soviet Union in 1940 and 1944. To realize the potential value of these data for scientific research, we have recently scanned the register using optical character recognition (OCR) software, and developed proprietary computer code to extract these data. Here we outline the steps involved in the digitization process, and present an overview of the Migration Karelia (MiKARELIA) database now available to researchers. The digitized register contains over 160000 adults and a wide range of data on births, marriages, occupations and movements of these forced migrants, likely to be of interest to researchers across disciplines including demographers, anthropologists, evolutionary biologists, historians, economists and sociologists.


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