The contemporary Armenian diaspora is spread throughout the world, with its core composed of descendants of the survivors of the atrocities carried out by the Turkish authorities during the decline of the Ottoman Empire (1881–1922). The majority of this established diaspora hails from what was once western Armenia and is now eastern Turkey, in contrast to the newest wave of Armenian economic migrants, who come from portions of eastern historical Armenia ruled by the czarist and then Soviet empires and who left following the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. Unlike the new migrants, the older diasporans have to negotiate the gap between a mythical homeland and an actual “step-homeland” in the shape of the present Republic o...
The concept of return is an intoxicating analytic for scholars, for several reasons. The idea that m...
This dissertation examines the positionality that informs both internal and external identity mainte...
This dissertation examines the Republic of Armenia (RA) and its elites’ attempts to reframe state-di...
The contemporary Armenian diaspora is spread throughout the world, with its core composed of descend...
For over forty decades, the notion of diaspora has been discussed in the context of global processes...
This thesis examines the immigration to and long-term settlement in post-Soviet Armenia of Armenians...
Return migration from the diaspora to the ancestral homeland has emerged as an important sub-field w...
The diasporan occupies a liminal space as a person that comes from one place, yet lives in another. ...
The attachment of immigrants and their descendants to an ethnic community is, at least partly, a mat...
Recently the concept of “diaspora” has become a popular subject and two polarized views dominate the...
This article, based on research in the Armenian National Archives, focuses upon a neglected aspect o...
Focusing on the diasporic characteristics shown by ancestral return migrants, this case study looks ...
International audienceSince diaspora studies emerged in the 1980s, the Armenian dispersion has playe...
After the close of World War II, the Soviet Union sponsored a so-called “repatriation” campaign to a...
This article analyses the idealization of Ethiopia as a homeland in the memory of Armenian ...
The concept of return is an intoxicating analytic for scholars, for several reasons. The idea that m...
This dissertation examines the positionality that informs both internal and external identity mainte...
This dissertation examines the Republic of Armenia (RA) and its elites’ attempts to reframe state-di...
The contemporary Armenian diaspora is spread throughout the world, with its core composed of descend...
For over forty decades, the notion of diaspora has been discussed in the context of global processes...
This thesis examines the immigration to and long-term settlement in post-Soviet Armenia of Armenians...
Return migration from the diaspora to the ancestral homeland has emerged as an important sub-field w...
The diasporan occupies a liminal space as a person that comes from one place, yet lives in another. ...
The attachment of immigrants and their descendants to an ethnic community is, at least partly, a mat...
Recently the concept of “diaspora” has become a popular subject and two polarized views dominate the...
This article, based on research in the Armenian National Archives, focuses upon a neglected aspect o...
Focusing on the diasporic characteristics shown by ancestral return migrants, this case study looks ...
International audienceSince diaspora studies emerged in the 1980s, the Armenian dispersion has playe...
After the close of World War II, the Soviet Union sponsored a so-called “repatriation” campaign to a...
This article analyses the idealization of Ethiopia as a homeland in the memory of Armenian ...
The concept of return is an intoxicating analytic for scholars, for several reasons. The idea that m...
This dissertation examines the positionality that informs both internal and external identity mainte...
This dissertation examines the Republic of Armenia (RA) and its elites’ attempts to reframe state-di...