Armenia’s Third Republic: Independence and Early Years
Dr. Asbed Kotchikian looks back on the events that gave rise to the independence movement in Soviet Armenia in the late 1980s and the circumstances that shaped the newly independent republic after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Positioned at the intersection of three major global powers, Armenia had to find a balanced approach to foreign policy while struggling with a blockade and a war for Nagorno Karabagh. Dr. Kotchikian describes the sense of hope, optimism and purpose that drove the nation to make a united stand for freedom and self-determination.
About the speaker
Image
Asbed Kotchikian
Dr. Asbed Kotchikian is a senior lecturer at the Global Studies Department at Bentley University where he teaches courses on the Middle East and former Soviet Union. During the last 15 years, Dr. Kotchikian has traveled extensively and lived in countries in the Middle East and the former Soviet Union. He has written, lectured, presented, and organized conferences on foreign policies of small and weak states, questions of identity and transformation of transnational (Diasporic) groups, national identity, and regional developments in the Middle East and Eurasia. He has published articles and book chapters in various venues including Demokratizatsya, Insight Turkey, and Central Asia and the Caucasus. His book, The Dialectics of Small States: Foreign Policy Making in Armenia and Georgia, was published in 2008. Since 2008, he has also been the editor-in-chief of the academic peer reviewed journal, Armenian Review.
Asbed Kotchikian
Dr. Asbed Kotchikian is a senior lecturer at the Global Studies Department at Bentley University where he teaches courses on the Middle East and former Soviet Union. During the last 15 years, Dr. Kotchikian has traveled extensively and lived in countries in the Middle East and the former Soviet Union. He has written, lectured, presented, and organized conferences on foreign policies of small and weak states, questions of identity and transformation of transnational (Diasporic) groups, national identity, and regional developments in the Middle East and Eurasia. He has published articles and book chapters in various venues including Demokratizatsya, Insight Turkey, and Central Asia and the Caucasus. His book, The Dialectics of Small States: Foreign Policy Making in Armenia and Georgia, was published in 2008. Since 2008, he has also been the editor-in-chief of the academic peer reviewed journal, Armenian Review.
Related Webtalks
Armenian Folk Music: Preserving an Oral Tradition
Armenian Churches: Development of Style
Mélinée Manouchian: A Life of Resistance and Remembrance
The AGBU Nubar Library Holdings
The Importance of Genocide Recognition
Armenian Merchants and the Origins of European Café Culture
The Role of Armenian Women During the Genocide
Aurora Mardiganian: Survivor, Witness, Activist
Defining an Undeniable Genocide
1923, The Birth of Armenian Cinema
State and Sovereignty in the Armenian Experience
The History of the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial
Armenian Churches: Documents of a Past
The History and Activities of the AGBU Nubar Library
Armenian Print Culture in the Early Modern Period
Armenian Feminists: Hayganush Mark and Hay Gin
Ravished Armenia: Representing Genocide in Early American Cinema
Missak Manouchian: Hero of the French Resistance
GIVE TO AGBU
Make an impact that will change lives. Donate today.