Armenia in a Transforming World: ACNIS Releases New Yearbook

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Center for National and International Studies
75 Yerznkian Street
Yerevan 375033, Armenia
Tel: (+374 – 10) 52.87.80 or 27.48.18
Fax: (+374 – 10) 52.48.46
Email: [email protected] or [email protected]
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April 12, 2006

Armenia in a Transforming World: ACNIS Releases New Yearbook

Yerevan–Today the Armenian Center for National and International Studies
(ACNIS) publicly presented its annual trilingual almanac, this year entitled
“Armenia in a Transforming World.” The event brought together the yearbook’s
participating authors, editorial staff, publisher, foreign embassy staff,
political scientists, and media representatives for the expression of mutual
gratitude and the sharing of views and evaluations.

Held in the official reception hall at ACNIS headquarters, the program was
opened by Stiopa Safarian, the Center’s director of research and academic
editor of the new release. “The research presented in the yearbook
encompasses Armenia’s transnational and domestic challenges, which in the
transforming world render imperative Armenia’s own transformation. The
answers provided by the authors to a variety of problematic issues such as
international and regional security as well as Armenia’s global surroundings
and its complex relationships dictate new approaches for our Center and
Armenia’s analytical circles alike,” he said.

Stiopa Safarian then conveyed ACNIS founder Raffi Hovannisian’s greetings as
expressed in the preface to the new yearbook. He also added that the
objective of this almanac is to elicit and share with policymaker and public
alike the principal trends of the contemporary world, Armenia’s development
priorities against their background, and policy responses to the challenges
facing the Republic.

Before turning to the presentation of its contents, Safarian extended the
Center’s deep appreciation to the editorial staff and contributors for their
diligent work, and acknowledged Vrezh Markosian, director of the Tigran Mets
Publishing House, for his high-caliber production of the book. He also
expressed gratitude to all the supporters of the Center throughout the
world, who have made it possible to carry out such cutting-edge research
programs in Armenia.

The comprehensive studies on the strategic directions of regional security,
Armenia’s economy, and other domains of utmost importance, in addition to
the applied analyses and documentary materials published in this volume, he
said, consist of three main parts-“Armenia, Region, World”; “Public and
Expert Opinion Surveys”; and “Maps.” These reflect the activity of the
Center and its associated partners during the past year.

Part one of the 826-page compendium starts, in a chapter called “The Region
and Its Conflicts,” with an article by Dr. Martin Malek, a scholar from the
Austrian National Academy of Defense, in which the author examines state
collapse as a phenomenon of international relations. This monograph is
followed by the works of ACNIS analysts Stiopa Safarian and Alvard
Barkhudarian. The first of these is devoted to the origins of conflicts and
symmetric and asymmetric solutions thereto, and the second to Mountainous
Karabagh and its security parameters. Next, ACNIS analyst Hovhannes
Vardanian presents the current democratization processes in the post-Soviet
space, and senior fellow Hovsep Khurshudian looks into the latest dynamics
in Armenian-Russian economic relations. This chapter concludes with Yerevan
State University professor Aram Harutiunian’s incisive analysis of modern
Russian-American correlations and ACNIS analyst Alen Ghevondian’s
examination of modern Iran. Also a valuable asset for the reader is Alvard
Barkhudarian’s exploration of interests and speculations with respect to the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline.

The second chapter, on “Domestic Challenges,” contains scholarly analyses
and policy recommendations concerning the transformation of political
thinking in Armenia; the peculiarities of the country’s transitional period;
constitutional and electoral code amendments in Armenia; the country’s
energy system; civil-military relations; and the attitude of Armenia’s youth
toward matters of national importance. These studies are prepared by
Constitutional Court Justice Felix Tokhian, Karapet Kalenchian, Hovhannes
Vardanian, Areg Barseghian, Alvard Barkhudarian, and Syuzanna Barseghian.

The book’s second part features a bilingual presentation of ACNIS’s public
and expert opinion polls conducted over the course of 2004 and 2005. They
are entitled “Corruption in Armenia”; “Armenia’s Thirteen-Year-Old
Independence and Sovereignty”; “Public Opinion and Urgent Issues on Armenia’
s Political Agenda”; “Constitutional and Electoral Reforms”; “The Karabagh
Story: 17 Years in Progress”; “The Armenian Genocide: 90 Years and Waiting”;
“The South Caucasus: Common or Separate Destinies? Armenia’s Place and Role
in the Region”; “Regional and Community Development Issues in Armenia”; and
“Development Issues in Yerevan.”

Finally, for the first time ever, this year’s annual work product includes a
section with twelve annotated maps depicting the past and present of the
Mountainous Karabagh conflict. Yearbook 2005 concludes with a complete list
of individual and institutional supporters of ACNIS from its founding to
date.

Words of appreciation were delivered, and assessments offered, by
participating authors Alvard Barkhudarian, Hovsep Khurshudian, and many
others. It was yet again emphasized that the main characteristic of the
yearbook is the variety of themes and genres and the free competition of
ideas and policy options.

On behalf of the entire editorial staff, comprising Gevorg Lalayan, Stiopa
Safarian, Hasmik Mkrtchian, Gor Grigorian, Noune Aidinian, Sayat Kuyumcuyan,
Karapet Kalenchian, and Syuzanna Barseghian, the yearbook’s editor-in-chief
Gevorg Lalayan extended his heartfelt message. “First and foremost, this
compilation is a product of teamwork. Even though the articles in this work
explore different perspectives upon regional and geopolitical developments,
in inherent measure they are geared toward the same objectives: the
determination of Armenia’s contemporary place and role and the bolstering of
its political gravity,” Lalayan closed.

All invited guests and public participants were then offered complimentary
copies of “Armenia in a Transforming World” together with a glass of
Armenian sparkling wine.

Founded in 1994 by Armenia’s first Minister of Foreign Affairs Raffi K.
Hovannisian and supported by a global network of contributors, ACNIS serves
as a link between innovative scholarship and the public policy challenges
facing Armenia and the Armenian people in the post-Soviet world. It also
aspires to be a catalyst for creative, strategic thinking and a wider
understanding of the new global environment. In 2006, the Center focuses
primarily on civic education, conflict resolution, and applied research on
critical domestic and foreign policy issues for the state and the nation.

For further information on the Center call (37410) 52-87-80 or 27-48-18; fax
(37410) 52-48-46; email [email protected] or [email protected]; or visit

www.acnis.am
www.acnis.am