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Moorad Mooradian Seminar & Lecture at NAASR

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  • Moorad Mooradian Seminar & Lecture at NAASR

    PRESS RELEASE

    National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
    395 Concord Avenue
    Belmont, MA 02478
    Tel.: 617-489-1610
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: www.naasr.org

    MOORAD MOORADIAN TO GIVE LECTURE AND ALL-DAY SEMINAR AT NAASR IN
    SEPTEMBER

    Dr. Moorad Mooradian of Yerevan State University will present "A New
    Look at TARC (Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Commission)" in a lecture
    at the Center and Headquarters of the National Association for Armenian
    Studies and Research (NAASR), 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, Mass., on
    Thursday evening, September 8, at 8 p.m. On Saturday September 10,
    Mooradian will offer an all-day seminar at NAASR entitled "Hurting
    Stalemate or Mediation? The Conflict Over Nagorno-Karabakh."

    Dr. Moorad Mooradian's writings on Armenian political and historical
    issues are widely read on a weekly basis in English-language
    Armenian newspapers, and he is also the author of a new book on the
    Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Commission. His previous lectures at
    NAASR have been to standing-room-only audiences.

    A FRESH PERSPECTIVE ON TARC

    One of the most contentious issues in the contemporary historiography
    of Armenia and Turkey has been the Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation
    Commission (TARC). In his new book, A New Look at TARC, Dr.

    Mooradian has examined TARC and its composition and has analyzed it
    in terms of conflict resolution theory.

    Dr. Mooradian will offer his evaluation of TARC's stated goals, its
    performance, the quality and competence of its members as reconcilers,
    and the course that chairman David Phillips allowed the commission
    to travel. Dr. Mooradian maintains that the idea of TARC was good,
    but was funded by the wrong parties and was unable to make the public
    view it as impartial; it's members, except for the chairman, were all
    activists for their respective sides; and that TARC chose the wrong
    issue upon which to attempt to build a bridge between the Armenian
    and the Turkish governments and societies. It is Mooradian's view
    that TARC violated basic conflict resolution theory and practice and
    thus was destined to be minimally, if at all, successful.

    Professor Dennis Sandole of the Institute for Conflict Analysis and
    Resolution at George Mason University, who wrote the foreword for the
    book, states that for "those who are interested in understanding and
    dealing with intractable, often violent conflicts, Dr. Mooradian's
    account of TARC is a must."

    Copies of A New Look at TARC will be on sale in the NAASR bookstore
    and Dr. Mooradian will be available to autograph copies. The event
    is open to the public at no charge (donations accepted at door).

    AN IN-DEPTH ANALYSIS OF KARABAKH STALEMATE

    Capitalizing on Mooradian's presence in the Boston area, NAASR will
    feature him in an all-day Saturday seminar on September 10, from 9:00
    a.m. to 4:00 p.m., which will examine the various aspects of mediation,
    its goals and various processes, in comparison with theory and with
    what actually transpired in the Karabakh mediation efforts.

    An analysis will be presented on the intensified warfare that
    commenced with the Kelbajar offensive in 1993. Comparisons of the
    several mediation efforts will be made to determine whether it was the
    mediations themselves or the increased violence and destruction that
    caused the opposing sides to seek an end to the organized violence
    that culminated in the ongoing ceasefire.

    The Russian mediation that competed with the CSCE (OSCE) effort will be
    analyzed closely, with an effort to determine if it is valid to give
    the Russians credit for bringing the Armenian and Azerbaijani side
    to the negotiating table that led to the ceasefire. In the process
    of evaluating the data, an examination via quantitative analysis will
    be made to determine the logical outcomes of the mediations. Finally,
    Dr. Mooradian will address the question--if a hurting stalemate brought
    an end to massive violence in the form of set-to military battles,
    why did/has it not led to a peace treaty?

    Preregistration Recommended

    Information on fees can be obtained from the NAASR offices.

    Admission is open to all, but enrollment will be limited in order
    to encourage active discussion and interaction. It is strongly urged
    that participants register by September 1.

    Dr. Moorad Mooradian received a PhD from the Institute for
    Conflict Analysis and Resolution at George Mason University after a
    distinguished 25-year career in the United States Army, from which he
    retired as a colonel. He was Professor of History and International
    Relations at the West Point U. S. Military Academy, N.Y.

    Mooradian helped establish a Conflict Studies Curriculum at Yerevan
    State University, which now awards both undergraduate and graduate
    level degrees. He has been teaching at Yerevan State since 1995 as a
    Visiting Professor and has developed a Long Distance Learning Center
    there so that students may receive instruction from the U.S. as well as
    Yerevan. He has also served as an unofficial advisor to the Minister
    of Foreign Affairs and has been a Fulbright Scholar to Armenia.
    Dr. Mooradian is a former member of NAASR's Board of Directors.

    More information on Dr. Mooradian's lecture or seminar or about NAASR
    and its programs for the furtherance of Armenian studies, research, and
    publication may be had by calling 617-489-1610, by fax at 617-484-1759,
    by e-mail at [email protected], or by writing to NAASR, 395 Concord Ave.,
    Belmont, MA 02478.
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