INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE AT UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN TO MARK GENOCIDE CENTENARY
10:21 18.09.2014
http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/09/18/international-conference-at-university-of-nebraska-lincoln-to-mark-genocide-centenary/
On the occasion of the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide, the
University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL) will host a two-day conference
from March 19-20, 2015, entitled "Crossing the Centennial: The
Historiography of the Armenian Genocide Re-Evaluated," the Armenian
Weekly reports.
Organized by Prof. Bedross Der Matossian from the Department of History
at UNL, the conference is co-sponsored by the Harris Center for Judaic
Studies, the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
(NAASR) in Belmont, Mass., and the Society for Armenian Studies (SAS)
in cooperation with the Department of History, the Human Rights and
Humanitarian Affairs Program, and the Institute of Ethnic Studies
at UNL.
The conference will focus on four under-researched themes that
have recently gained scholarly attention and analytical depth:
humanitarianism and humanitarian intervention in the Armenian Genocide;
women and children in the Armenian Genocide; comparative dimensions
of the Armenian Genocide; and the impact of the Armenian Genocide.
Twenty-two scholars from Armenia, Cambodia, Canada, Holland, Hungary,
Israel, and the United States representing 17 different academic
institutions will participate in the conference.
10:21 18.09.2014
http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/09/18/international-conference-at-university-of-nebraska-lincoln-to-mark-genocide-centenary/
On the occasion of the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide, the
University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL) will host a two-day conference
from March 19-20, 2015, entitled "Crossing the Centennial: The
Historiography of the Armenian Genocide Re-Evaluated," the Armenian
Weekly reports.
Organized by Prof. Bedross Der Matossian from the Department of History
at UNL, the conference is co-sponsored by the Harris Center for Judaic
Studies, the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
(NAASR) in Belmont, Mass., and the Society for Armenian Studies (SAS)
in cooperation with the Department of History, the Human Rights and
Humanitarian Affairs Program, and the Institute of Ethnic Studies
at UNL.
The conference will focus on four under-researched themes that
have recently gained scholarly attention and analytical depth:
humanitarianism and humanitarian intervention in the Armenian Genocide;
women and children in the Armenian Genocide; comparative dimensions
of the Armenian Genocide; and the impact of the Armenian Genocide.
Twenty-two scholars from Armenia, Cambodia, Canada, Holland, Hungary,
Israel, and the United States representing 17 different academic
institutions will participate in the conference.