Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Forthcoming Events of the Armenian Studies Program at U.C. Berkeley

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

  • Forthcoming Events of the Armenian Studies Program at U.C. Berkeley

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Studies Program
    University of California, Berkeley
    Berkeley, CA 94720-2550
    Contact: Prof. Stephan Astourian
    (510) 643-6737
    [email protected]


    Lecture

    The Honorable Robert Avetisyan
    Permanent Representative of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR) to the
    United States

    "The Independent Nagorno-Karabakh-Artsakh Republic: The First 20 Years of
    Challenges and Achievements."

    Friday, September 30, 2011
    270 Stephens Hall, U.C. Berkeley
    12:00 Noon

    Sponsored by the Armenian Studies Program and the Institute of Slavic, East
    European, and Eurasian Studies.




    Symposium

    `The Presence of the Past: Legal Dimensions of Armenian-Turkish Relations.'

    Sunday, October 2, 2011
    370-371 Dwinelle Hall, U.C. Berkeley
    10am-12pm and 1:30pm-5pm


    Participants;

    Professor Alfred de Zayas (Geneva School of Diplomacy and International
    Relations) Professor Susan Karamanian (Associate Dean for International and
    Comparative Legal Studies, Professorial Lecturer in Law; The George
    Washington University Law School) Professor Catherine Kessedjian (University
    Pantheon-Assas, Paris II) Professor Raymond Kevorkian (Institut français de
    géopolitique, Université Paris-VIII-Saint-Denis) Professor Serge Sur
    (University Pantheon-Assas, Paris II)

    This symposium will explore three contentious issues which are preventing
    Armenian-Turkish rapprochement (cf. the still unratified Armenian-Turkish
    Protocols signed on October 10, 2009), complicating Turkish-Azerbaijani
    relations, and thwarting the goals of the United States and Russia in the
    South Caucasus. These are the possible legal consequences of the Armenian
    genocide, or at least the crime against humanity, committed by the Ottoman
    Empire in 1915-17, the relevance to the present of the Treaty of Sevres
    (August 10, 1920) and of President Woodrow Wilson arbitration on the
    borders of the then envisioned Armenian State, and the validity of the
    Treaty of Kars (October 13, 1921) defining the borders of the South
    Caucasus. These issues also affect the resolution of the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over the status of the self-proclaimed,
    unrecognized Republic of Mountainous Karabagh, and thus the stabilization of
    the South Caucasus as a whole.


    Organized by the Armenian Studies Program at U.C. Berkeley. Co-sponsored by
    the Western Armenian National Congress.

Working...
X