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Academics in Georgia and U.S. Affected by War

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  • Academics in Georgia and U.S. Affected by War

    The Chronicle of Higher Education
    September 5, 2008 Friday



    Academics in Georgia and U.S. Affected by War


    by ANNA NEMTSOVA and KARIN FISCHER

    Fighting between Georgia and Russia has affected higher education in
    both Georgia and the United States.

    Gori University, which sits just outside the disputed territory of
    South Ossetia, was among the targets of Russian forces in August.

    The university suffered two bombings in three days. One of its six
    buildings was hit, windows were broken, and shrapnel ruined some
    storage sheds. The campus was soon abandoned by its 110 professors and
    2,000 students.

    Ironically, the now partly ruined university had been seen as a rare
    success story in the separatist dispute that sparked the war.

    The institution represented the integration of Gori State University
    and Tskhinvali University. The latter had been in the center of South
    Ossetia, a breakaway province, but moved to Gori after a previous war
    there in 1992.

    Meanwhile at least a dozen American academics and students were
    evacuated from the former Soviet republic.

    One professor and three students from Case Western Reserve University,
    who were planning to spend a month analyzing and mapping
    archaeological sites near Tbilisi, were instead forced to leave the
    country. They rented a van and drove to Turkey along with a colleague
    from the University of Toronto.

    Most of the other academics left Georgia as part of convoys to
    neighboring Armenia organized by the U.S. government, which
    recommended that all American citizens depart Georgia. Students from
    the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the University of
    Michigan at Ann Arbor, and the American Councils for International
    Education, a nonprofit group that runs overseas programs and
    exchanges, were on the convoys.

    The unrest has also stranded some Georgian students who were studying
    or planning to study at American universities, preventing them from
    traveling for the fall term or for new-student orientation, several
    college officials said.

    The University of Washington canceled a monthlong program on Georgian
    culture and history that had been scheduled to begin in August.
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