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Panel Discussion To Explore Relations Between Turks, Kurds, And Arme

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  • Panel Discussion To Explore Relations Between Turks, Kurds, And Arme

    PANEL DISCUSSION TO EXPLORE RELATIONS BETWEEN TURKS, KURDS, AND ARMENIANS

    www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/04/07/pane l-discussion-to-explore-relations-between-turks-ku rds-armenians/
    April 7, 2009

    WALTHAM, Mass. (A.W.)-On April 20, a panel discussion titled "Subjects
    and Citizens: (Un)Even Relations between Turks, Kurds, Armenians"
    will be held at Bentley University's Adamian Academic Center, Wilder
    Pavilion (175 Forest Street,Waltham). The event, organized by Bentley
    University's Global Studies Department and the Armenian Review,
    begins at 7 p.m.

    The panel is made up of a group of leading scholars and commentators,
    including Dr. Ugur Umit Ungor (University of Sheffield, UK), Bilgin
    Ayata (Johns Hopkins), Dr. Henry Theriault (Worcester State College),
    and Dr. Dikran Kaligian (Regis College). Dr. Asbed Kotchikian
    (Bentley Unversity) will moderate. Weekly editor Khatchig Mouradian
    will deliver opening remarks.

    The panel aims at looking at the history and examining the power
    relations between Armenians, Kurds, and Turks after the apparent
    homogenization of Eastern Anatolia as a result of the mass killings
    and deportations of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire. The
    panel will discuss these relations and the prospects of rapprochement
    among the three groups.

    Ugur Umit Ungor is a lecturer at the University of Sheffield. He was
    born in 1980 and studied sociology and history at the Universities of
    Groningen, Utrecht, Toronto, and Amsterdam. His main area of interest
    is the historical sociology of mass violence and nationalism in the
    modern world. He has published on genocide, in general, and on the
    Rwandan and Armenian genocides, in particular. He finished his Ph.D.,
    titled "Young Turk Social Engineering: Genocide, Nationalism, and
    Memory in Eastern Turkey, 1913-1950" at the department of history of
    the University of Amsterdam.

    Bilgin Ayata is completing her Ph.D. at the department of political
    science at John Hopkins University, Baltimore. Her research interests
    include the politics of displacement, trans-nationalism, social
    movements, and migration. Her dissertation examines the displacement
    of Kurds in Turkey and Europe. She currently lives in Berlin.

    Henry C. Theriault earned his Ph.D. in Philosophy in 1999 from the
    University of Massachusetts, with a specialization in social and
    political philosophy. He is currently Associate Professor of Philosophy
    at Worcester State College, where he has taught since 1998. Since
    2007, he has served as Co-Editor-in-Chief of the peer-reviewed journal
    Genocide Studies and Prevention and has been on the Advisory Council
    of the International Association of Genocide Scholars. His research
    focuses on philosophical approaches to genocide issues, especially
    genocide denial, long-term justice, ethical analyses of perpetrator
    motivations, and the role of violence against women in genocide.

    Dikran Kaligian is a visiting professor in the History Department
    at Regis College and Managing Editor of the Armenian Review. He
    received his doctorate from Boston College. He is the author of
    Armenian Organization and Ideology under Ottoman Rule: 1908-1914
    (Transaction Publishers, 2009).

    Asbed Kotchikian is a lecturer in politicals cience and international
    relations at Bentley University. His area of research includes the
    foreign policies of small states, the modern political history of
    the post-Soviet South Caucasus, and issues of national identity.

    The event is free and open to the public.
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