Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Carnegie Commits $2.5 Mil to Centers for Advanced Study in Armenia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Carnegie Commits $2.5 Mil to Centers for Advanced Study in Armenia

    Carnegie Corporation Commits $2.5 Million to Centers for Advanced
    Study in Armenia
    By Asbarez
    Mar 19th, 2010

    NEW YORK - Asserting scholarly research and education in the arts,
    humanities and social sciences are not luxuries in difficult times but
    vitally necessary for emerging nations as they articulate new civic
    and cultural identities, Carnegie Corporation President Vartan
    Gregorian announced a $2.5 commitment over the next two years to
    further strengthen centers for advanced study focusing on Western
    Eurasia and the South Caucasus.

    A single Western Eurasia center covers Belarus, Ukraine, and Moldova.
    There are three South Caucasus centers in Armenia, Azerbaijan, and
    Georgia. The center for Armenia is based at Yerevan State University.

    The grants announced today represent a significant renewal of support
    for the four advanced study centers originally launched by Carnegie
    Corporation in 2003, bringing the foundation's total investment in
    these centers to $14 million.

    `The intellectual and academic resources in these centers of
    excellence are helping to advance the transformation of the region's
    higher education institutions into modern and more comprehensive
    research universities,' said Gregorian. `The women and men supported
    by the centers - the intelligentsia - are the region's engine of reform.
    Hence, we must continue to invest in them as they contribute to
    economic development, political and legal reform, and the formation of
    post-Soviet civil society.'

    Though started in 2003, the center for Western Eurasia and the three
    South Caucasus centers grew from work initiated by Carnegie
    Corporation to prevent degradation of the academic sector in the wake
    of the Soviet Union's collapse. Nine Centers for Advanced Study and
    Education (CASEs) were established in Russia, in partnership with the
    John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Russian Ministry
    of Education and Science. Over the past 10 years, the CASEs enabled
    several thousand Russian academics to engage in research, publication
    and international exchanges. These university-based centers have
    helped to build up the capacities of the region's intellectuals and
    have contributed to stanching brain drain.

    `Carnegie Corporation has worked with regional academics, educators
    and officials to create access to scholarly resources and programs
    aimed at enhancing the post-Soviet transformation of these societies.
    Continued investment will help solidify the processes that strengthen
    the role of academia in paving the way toward the countries' future,'
    said Deana Arsenian, Vice President, International Program, and
    Program Director, Higher Education in Eurasia at Carnegie Corporation.

    South Caucasus Centers Supporting Scholars, Providing Resources
    A $2 million grant to the Eurasia Foundation will continue to fund the
    Caucasus Research Resource Center (CRRC), a network of resource and
    training centers established in the capital cities of Armenia,
    Azerbaijan and Georgia. The centers, which partner with local
    universities, offer scholars and practitioners stable opportunities
    for integrated research, training and collaboration in the region.
    Academics supported through the centers have helped to strengthen
    social science research and public policy analysis in the South
    Caucasus.

    Over the past seven years, more than 100 promising young scholars have
    received research support from one of the three Caucasus-based centers
    through fellowship programs. And, the network of regional centers has
    sponsored workshops, conferences and seminars in social science
    research methods as well as on policy-relevant topics in fields such
    as sociology, legal studies, economics, demography, political science,
    public policy, and environmental studies. The CRRC centers have
    assembled public access libraries and IT labs, created print and
    electronic publishing resources and have also offered training in
    quantitative research methods and statistical analysis.

    `Eurasia Foundation's partnership with Carnegie Corporation over
    several years has enabled us to create something entirely new in the
    Caucasus - an international-caliber academic network covering the entire
    region,' said William Horton Beebe-Center, President, Eurasia
    Foundation. `The regional network advances the skills of participating
    students and researchers, connects them with international colleagues
    in the neighborhood and beyond, offers scholars viable career paths in
    their native country, and provides a fact-based foundation for
    policymakers throughout the region to steer their countries in
    directions that improve the lives of ordinary citizens.'

    One of the Caucasus Research Resource Center's core programs has been
    the large-scale data collection and analyses of local and regional
    developments known as the Data Initiative. A response to the dearth of
    reliable, up-to-date and accessible data on social, political and
    economic issues, the Data Initiative collects household and other data
    on issues such as poverty, employment, education, migration, and crime
    across the Caucasus region.

    Border Region Center Focuses on Social Transformation
    A $500,000 grant to the American Councils for International Education
    will continue support for a cross-regional center covering Belarus,
    Moldova, and Ukraine. The center, initially established at the
    European Humanities University (EHU) in Minsk, Belarus, now operates
    at the `university in exile' in Vilnius, Lithuania, following the
    closure in 2004 by the Belarus government of EHU's Minsk campus.

    Scholars supported by the EHU-based center have worked to explore the
    social transformations in the border regions of Western Eurasia. An
    informal network of scholars from across the region, with support from
    the center, have worked together to publish academic monographs and
    innovative serials such as Perekrestki (Crossroads), with special
    attention to long-neglected (or proscribed) themes and new
    methodologies in religious studies, folklore, philosophy, history, and
    cultural studies.

    `The Belarus CASE has successfully taken root in the intellectual
    space of Western Eurasia and is providing unique research
    opportunities as the only independent social science center in
    Belarus. It has become the hub for a network of both established and
    younger scholars from Belarus, Moldova, and Ukraine,' commented Dan
    Davidson, President of the American Councils for International
    Education.

    `The center has offered research and travel support to more than 100
    scholars, including scholars working on a study of comparative
    national identities; developing university curricula in border
    studies; and an analysis of the role of the Russian minority in
    Moldova,' said Carnegie Corporation's Deana Arsenian. `The center's
    research is methodologically rigorous and, even from afar, is closely
    linked to the reform of research and education in numerous regional
    higher educational institutions. Situated in Lithuania, a country
    outside of those on which its work focuses - Belarus, Moldova and
    Ukraine - allows the center to operate with a degree of intellectual
    freedom it might not otherwise have. Yet the center's exile status
    also keeps it keenly focused on its goal of eventual return to
    Belarus.'

    Carnegie Corporation of New York is a philanthropic foundation created
    by Andrew Carnegie in 1911 to do `real and permanent good in this
    world.' The foundation has a long history of supporting work focusing
    on Eurasia including the establishment in 1948 of the Russian Research
    Center at Harvard University to foster a comprehensive understanding
    and multidisciplinary study of Russia and the Soviet Union. Prior to
    the existence of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, the Center
    provided a way for the United States to become informed about the
    U.S.S.R. in its role as a new world power.
Working...
X