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After Kosovo: Whither Karabakh?, One-day colloquium at U.Mich ASP

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  • After Kosovo: Whither Karabakh?, One-day colloquium at U.Mich ASP

    PRESS RELEASE


    For further information, please contact:
    Gloria Caudill, Administrator
    Armenian Studies Program
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
    [email protected]
    (734) 763-0622



    AFTER KOSOVO: WHITHER KARABAKH?
    One-day colloquium to be held at the University of Michigan will be
    webcast live


    The Armenian Studies Program at the University of Michigan is
    pleased to announce the convening of a one day workshop on Kosovo and
    its consequences to be held at the Ann Arbor campus on January 30,
    2009.

    With the American and European recognition of an independent
    Kosovo, against the express desires of Serbia and Russia, and without
    the sanction of the United Nations, a new precedent was set for the
    process of recognizing new states after conflict and unilateral
    secession.  This one-day workshop will assess how the factor of
    international recognition of Kosovo's independence could influence
    non-recognized states that emerged from similar circumstances, such as
    Nagorno or Mountainous Karabakh in the Caucasus.

    Mountainous Karabakh represents an interesting case because the
    question of its fate has repercussions for the whole of the Caucasus
    region, an arena that has recently become a central focus of East-West
    power games.  The workshop also aims to cover the analytical gap in
    the understanding of these conflicts by bringing together
    international experts to examine the present and future of Mountainous
    Karabakh in light of the recent developments in Kosovo and Georgia.

    The main speakers at the workshop are (in alphabetical order):
    Dr. Vicken Cheterian (Cimera, Geneva, author of the just published War
    and Peace in the Caucasus: Russia's Troubled Frontier);
    Prof. Benjamin Graham (University of California, Davis, writing
    currently on Abkhazia and frozen conflicts);
    Prof. Mklulas Fabry (Georgia Institute of Technology, author of
    Recognizing States);
    Mr. Gocha Lortkipanidze (New York, former diplomat, the Republic
    of Georgia);
    Mr. Antranik Migranyan (Institute for Democracy and Cooperation,
    Moscow/New York);
    Mr. Elin Suleymanov (Consul-General of Azerbaijan in Los
    Angeles).

    Professors Ronald Grigor Suny (University of Michigan, author of
    Looking Toward Ararat:  Armenia in Modern History) and Gerard
    Libaridian (University of Michigan, author of Modern Armenia:  People,
    Nation, State) will serve as commentators.

    The workshop will meet in two sessions on Friday, (January
    30): 900 AM-12:00 NOON and 2:00 PM-5:00 PM (EST) in Anderson Room D,
    Michigan Union, the University of Michigan; the workshop is open to
    the public. Most importantly, the workshop will be webcast live
    (http://umtv-live.rs.itd.umich.edu/asp/asp013 009.asx) and therefore
    can be watched by anyone with access to the internet.

    The colloquium is being co-sponsored by CIMERA, a research
    organization in Geneva, Switzerland; a follow up gathering of the
    workshop will be held in Geneva, Switzerland in the Spring of 2009.
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