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U Michigan Appoints Libaridian New Dir. of Armenian Studies Program

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  • U Michigan Appoints Libaridian New Dir. of Armenian Studies Program

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Studies Program
    International Institute
    University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109
    Contact: G. J. Libaridian
    Te: 934-763-4555
    Email :[email protected]


    UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN APPOINTS LIBARIDIAN AS NEW DIRECTOR OF ARMENIAN
    STUDIES PROGRAM


    ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN. Professor Mark Tessler, the Director of the
    International Institute of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor,
    announced the appointment of Professor Gerard J. Libaridian as the new
    director of the Armenian Studies Program at the University.

    In his new responsibilities Dr. Libaridian will succeed Professor
    Kevork Bardakjian who has served in that position for more than a
    decade. Dr. Bardakjian is Marie Manoogian Professor of Armenian
    Language and Literature. Dr. Bardakjian's most recent work, `A
    Reference Guide to Modern Armenian Literature: 1500-1920' (Wayne State
    University, 2000), is now considered the standard in the field. In a
    special letter written on behalf of the International Institute which
    houses the Armenian Studies Program and a large number of regional
    study centers, Professor Tessler thanked Dr. Bardakjian for his
    unusually long and fruitful service.

    With two endowed chairs, lecture series, conferences and special
    projects, the Armenian Studies Program at the University of Michigan is
    considered one of the best programs in the Diaspora. In addition to
    Bardakjian and Libaridian, the core faculty for the Armenian Program on
    the Ann Arbor campus includes the highly respected historian Ronald
    Suny, the first holder of the Alex Manoogian Chair in Modern Armenian
    History and founding director of the Armenian Studies Program. Suny is
    currently Charles Tilly Collegiate Professor of Social and Political
    History and Professor Emeritus of Political Science and History,
    University of Chicago. His latest work, The Cambridge History of
    Russia, Volume iii: The Twentieth Century, was released in 2007. The
    University of Michigan system also houses, on its Dearborn campus, the
    Armenian Research Center founded by Dr. Dennis Papazian, and currently
    led by Professor Ara Sanjian.

    Professor Tessler stated that Professor Libaridian's appointment, for
    the usual three year term, to begin on September 1, 2007, was based on
    recommendations from relevant faculty and administrators in the
    University system and that the change of directorship was routine for
    such centers and programs.

    Professor Libaridian has been teaching at the University of Michigan,
    Ann Arbor since 2001. He holds the Alex Manoogian Chair of Modern
    Armenia History; his courses cover Armenian and Caucasus history and
    politics. In addition to his teaching in the Department of History,
    Libaridian is affiliated with the Center for Russian and East European
    Studies, the Center for Middle Eastern and North African Studies and
    the Center for European Studies. Prior to his return to academia,
    Libaridian served in the administration of the first President of
    Armenia, Levon Ter-Petrossian, from 1991-1997. Prior to his work in
    Armenia he was director (and co-founder) of the Zoryan Institute for
    Contemporary Armenian Research and Documentation in Cambridge, Mass.,
    editor of the Armenian Review and director of the ARF/Dashnaktsutiun
    Archives in Boston. He has taught and published extensively.
    Libaridian's 1999 The Challenge of Statehood was published in English,
    Armenian, French and Turkish. His latest book, Modern Armenia (2004)
    has just been released in paperback; a French edition of the volume is
    expected to be released in Paris in September. Libaridian is currently
    working on two new volumes: `Anatomy of Conflict. Nagorno Karabakh and
    the New World Order' and `In the Search of the Savior: Armenian
    Liberation Ideology from the 16th to the 19th Centuries.'
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