Dictionary Definition
defection
Noun
1 withdrawing support or help despite allegiance
or responsibility; "his abandonment of his wife and children left
them penniless" [syn: desertion, abandonment]
2 the state of having rejected your religious
beliefs or your political party or a cause (often in favor of
opposing beliefs or causes) [syn: apostasy, renunciation]
User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
In politics, a defector is a
person who gives up allegiance to one state or political entity in
exchange for allegiance to another. The term is sometimes used as a
synonym for traitor,
especially if the defector brings with him secrets
or confidential information. More broadly, it involves
abandoning a person, cause or doctrine to whom or to which one is
bound by some tie, as of allegiance or duty.
International politics
The physical act of defection is usually in a manner which violates the laws of the nation or political entity from which the person is seeking to depart. By contrast, mere changes in citizenship, or working with allied militia, usually does not violate any law.For example, in the 1950s, East Germans were
increasingly prohibited from traveling to the Western
Federal Republic of Germany where they were automatically
regarded as citizens according to Exclusive
mandate. The Berlin Wall
and fortifications along the Inner
German border were erected by the Communist East German
Democratic Republic in 1961 to enforce the prison-like policy.
When people tried to "defect" from the GDR they were to be shot on
sight. Several hundred people were killed along the border in their
Republikflucht
attempt. Official crossings did exist, but permissions to leave
temporarily or permanently were seldom granted. On the other hand,
the GDR citizenship of some "inconvenient" East Germans was
revoked, and they had to leave their home on short notice against
their will. Others, like singer Wolf
Biermann, were prohibited from returning into the GDR.
During the Cold War, the
many people emigrating from the Soviet Union
or Eastern Bloc
to the
West were called defectors. Westerners defected to the Eastern
Bloc as well: some of the more famous cases were British spy
Kim
Philby, who defected to Russia to avoid exposure as a KGB mole, and
22 Allied POWs (one Briton and twenty-one Americans) who
declined repatriation after the Korean War,
electing to remain in China.
When the individual leaves his country and
provides information to a foreign intelligence service, he is a
HUMINT
source defector. In some cases, defectors remain in the country
or with the political entity they are against, functioning as a
defector in place.
Political party defection
The term defection is also used to refer to the
departure of a member from a political
party to join another political party, typically because of
discontent in his existing party. Depending on position of the
person, it may be given a different name, such as party
switching or crossing
the floor. One famous political "defector" was Winston
Churchill, who first entered Parliament as a Conservative
in 1901, defected to the Liberals
in 1904, and defected back to the Conservatives in 1925.
See also
defection in Finnish: Loikkaus
defection in French: Défecteur
defection in Japanese: 亡命
defection in Swedish: Politisk avhoppare
defection in Chinese: 投誠
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abandonment, about-face,
accommodation,
adaptation, adjustment, alienation, alteration, amelioration, apostasy, backsliding, bad debt,
betrayal, betterment, blemish, bolt, break, breakaway, bug, catch, change, change of heart, changeableness,
constructive change, continuity, conversion, crack, crossing-over, default, defect, deficiency, degeneration, degenerative
change, delinquence,
delinquency,
dereliction,
deserter, desertion, deterioration, deviation, difference, disaffection, discontinuity, dishonor, dishonoring, disloyalty, disownment, divergence, diversification,
diversion, diversity, divorce, drawback, estrangement, failing, failure, faithlessness, falseness, fault, faute, fitting, flaw, flip-flop, foible, forsaking, frailty, going over, gradual
change, hole, imperfection, improvement, inadequacy, infirmity, kink, little problem, melioration, mitigation, modification, modulation, nondischarge of
debts, nonpayment,
nonremittal,
overthrow, parting, problem, protest, protested bill,
qualification,
radical change, ratting,
re-creation, realignment, recidivation, recidivism, recreancy, redesign, reform, reformation, rejection, remaking, renewal, renunciation, repudiation, reshaping, restructuring, reversal, revival, revivification, revolution, rift, runout, schism, secession, separation, shift, shortcoming, snag, something missing, sudden
change, switch, taint, tergiversation, total
change, transition,
treason, turn, turnabout, turning traitor,
uncollectible,
upheaval, variation, variety, violent change,
vulnerable place, walkout, weak link, weak point,
weakness, worsening