Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Academic Conference To Discuss Restitution, Reparation

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

  • Academic Conference To Discuss Restitution, Reparation

    ACADEMIC CONFERENCE TO DISCUSS RESTITUTION, REPARATION

    Armenian Weekly
    Wed, Oct 12 2011

    WORCESTER, Mass.-The Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide
    Studies at Clark University is sponsoring an interdisciplinary
    conference, "Beyond the Armenian Genocide: The Question of Restitution
    and Reparation in Comparative Review," organized by Taner Akcam, the
    Robert Aram '52 and Marianne Kaloosdian and Stephen and Marion Mugar
    Professor of Armenian Genocide Studies. The conference is presented
    in partnership with the National Association for Armenian Studies and
    Research (NAASR) and Eric Weitz, the Arsham and Charlotte Ohanessian
    Professor at the University of Minnesota. NAASR's participation is
    supported by the Ethel Jafarian Duffett Fund.

    The conference opens on Thurs., Oct. 27 at 7:30 p.m. with a public
    keynote address in Tilton Hall on the Clark University campus. John
    Torpey, a professor of sociology at the Graduate Center, CUNY, will
    give the opening address, "A Comparative Perspective on Reparations
    for Historical Injustices." Torpey is the author of Making Whole What
    Has Been Smashed: On Reparations Politic (Harvard University Press,
    2006). "Reparations," he says, "can be symbolic, such as apologies
    or the creation of memorials and museums. They can also be economic,
    such as financial compensation to individuals or collectivities, or
    material redress, such as settlement of the land claims of indigenous
    peoples. These measures can reflect cultural or legal claims to
    reparations, or both."

    The conference continues throughout the day on Fri., Oct. 28, with a
    series of panels for participants and invited guests. Leading scholars
    will examine questions of post-conflict justice in a comparative
    review of the Armenian Genocide, the Holocaust, and the Native
    American Genocide. The participants will consider different aspects
    of compensation, including the return of stolen art and artifacts;
    the restitution of personal and communal property; and how post-war
    agreements and treaties shape discussions about compensation. The
    Holocaust case offers a model for restitution and reparation that has
    achieved significant success, but also frustrating disappointments
    and delays. The Native American case provides a valuable example of
    the importance of pursuing justice at home and for all peoples.

    Discussions about the Armenian case will consider why efforts to
    secure compensation emerged so late and the influence of developments
    in securing justice for victims of the Holocaust.

    Turkish recognition of the Armenian Genocide has been an enduring
    goal of Armenian communities at home and internationally. Yet, the
    political, financial, and legal consequences that might emerge in the
    wake of recognition have not been fully articulated. Recently, scholars
    and lawyers have pursued concrete efforts to secure reparation,
    restitution, and compensation; they are proceeding independent
    of groups lobbying governments to acknowledge the genocide. These
    initiatives demonstrate that the pursuit of justice through financial
    means can progress without necessarily resolving the complicated
    politics of genocide recognition.

    Recent court cases against American and French insurance companies
    have resulted in reparations and have given encouragement to newly
    filed lawsuits in the U.S. These developments demonstrate that
    financial redress for the Armenian community may be possible on a
    broader scale. New lawsuits addressing theft of artifacts, properties,
    and bank accounts have been filed against the Turkish government and
    private Turkish companies. They seek compensation for both individual
    and collective losses suffered during the genocide.

    For more information, contact the Strassler Center for Holocaust and
    Genocide Studies (508-793-889; [email protected]) or NAASR (617-489-1610;
    [email protected]).


    From: Baghdasarian
Working...
X