Asya Darbinyan

Dr. Asya Darbinyan is the Executive Director of Chhange (Center for Holocaust, Human Rights & Genocide Education). She earned her Ph.D. in history from the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University. Prior to joining Chhange, Dr. Darbinyan worked as a Visiting Professor at the Strassler Center, where she taught courses on Genocide and Women, the Armenian Genocide, the History of Armenia and the History of Genocide. Dr. Darbinyan’s research and teaching expertise stand at the intersection of Armenian history, the history of the Russian Empire, genocide, refugees and humanitarian interventions, with a focus on the agency and actions of refugees in addressing their suffering and plight. Dr. Darbinyan is the recipient of multiple scholarships and grants: most recently, the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative’s Vartan Gregorian Scholarship to revise and expand her dissertation into a book manuscript. Dr. Darbinyan has also worked as a Postdoctoral Scholar at the Martin-Springer Institute, Northern Arizona University (NAU), a Fellow in Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Stockton University, and the Deputy Director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute in Yerevan, Armenia.
Diaspora

“First, I lost my father, then I lost my homeland…”

One of the highlights of my summer trip to Armenia this year was reconnecting with two remarkable people whom I…

Read More »
Special Reports

Genocide and Women: Teaching about the roles women play in genocidal and post-genocidal societies

Special Issue: Genocide Education for the 21st Century The Armenian Weekly, April 2023 My first steps in teaching in the…

Read More »
History

Imperial Russia’s Newspapers and the Relief Campaign for Armenian Refugees

The Great War caused unprecedented calamities throughout 1914-1918 and affected the lives of millions of people – combatants and civilians…

Read More »
Special Reports

Russia’s Humanitarian Response to the Armenian Genocide

Humanitarianism and the Refugee Crisis on the Caucasus Battlefront During World War I The Armenian Weekly Magazine April 2016 Introduction…

Read More »
Back to top button