STUDY OF NATIONALITIES WORLD CONVENTION
More than 600 experts and scholars gathered last weekend in New York to attend the
Fifth Annual Association for the Study of Nationalities World Convention, a three-day
event hosted by Columbia Universitys Harriman Institute and featuring 100 panels on
national identity, nationalism, ethnic conflicts, and state building in the former Soviet
republics. Since the 1970s, Columbia Universitys Harriman Institute has included
nationality and minority issues in its curriculum.
The panels covered a wide region from Central Asia and the Caucasus region to
Central and Eastern Europe -- and took various approaches to the material, from
region-specific to historical and thematic. Each time slot featured at least one panel
discussion from each region. Central Asian issues ranged from the Internet as a medium for
nationalist expression; Ferghana Valley tensions; democracy in Kazakhstan; and competing
representations of identity in Uzbekistan.
Following the Soviet collapse the nationalities field has mushroomed. Dominique Arel,
of Brown University's Watson Institute, pointed out the number of young scholars in
attendance and on panels presenting their scholarly research and fieldwork findings are
double last year's. One innovation at this year's convention was the designation of an
entire section for new films. Five films aired about Chechnya and four featured
theBalkans. One noteworthy film was the 1999 BBC documentary "A Cry from the
Grave," about the Bosnian city Srebrenica, the UN-designated "safe haven"
overtaken by the Serbian militia in July 1995.
Mark Von Hagen, Director of Columbia University's Harriman Institute, that hosted the
event, said the convention "brings together a nice interdisciplinary,
intergenerational, international, scholarly and policy crowd to discuss issues of great
contemporary interest and importance. "The convention provides a unique forum where
scholars and practitioners can cross-fertilize ideas. "Some of the best people who
deal with these issues [came to] Columbia this weekend," says Von Hagen, whose hope
is that the information exchanges "will contribute the lasting resolution of problems
in the real world."
Bea Hogan, freelance journalist
