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Nanore Barsoumian

Nanore Barsoumian is the Investigations Editor at The Armenian Weekly and a Boston-based writer and researcher. She is also a research fellow at New York University’s Global Institute for Advanced Studies, where she works on the Armenian Genocide Denial project, focusing on denial at the United Nations. She previously served as editor of The Armenian Weekly (2014–2016) and assistant editor (2010–2014), reporting from Armenia, Artsakh/Nagorno-Karabakh, Javakhk and Turkey. Her writing covers politics, books and human rights, and her scholarly work examines genocide memorialization and denial. She holds a bachelor’s degree in political science and English and a master’s degree in conflict resolution. Her research appears in After the Ottomans: Genocide’s Long Shadow and Armenian Resilience (I.B. Tauris, 2023). She is currently working on her debut novel exploring themes of belonging and self-invention. Find her on social media or at www.nanorebarsoumian.com.

One Comment

  1. Thank you, Ms. Barsoumian, for attempting to summarize this extensive and productive workshop.  I want to make one minor correction–I actually was editor or editor-in-chief of ARARAT quarterly–and bring out several points raised by myself and others that are worthy of public attention.  In the final session, I and others spoke about some possible projects that could be practically accomplished.  There are a number of archives that need preservation and ideally digitalization, and money should be raised by our community for this purpose.  There are also state archives accessible to researchers in theory, the use of which would benefit from financing.  Finally, there are some archives like that of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation which have been inaccessible for at least a decade or more to most researchers.  Although at present a partial digitalization of its holdings has begun, this is not a substitute for full and unimpeded access to materials from the 19th and early 20th centuries.  I hope this policy will be reconsidered by the ARF.  Unfortunately, many other Armenian collections and archives present similar obstacles to researchers.  Archives in the Republic of Armenia recently have presented a refreshing contrast.

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