Arda Arsenian Ekmekji

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Arda Arsenian Ekmekji is a

Kingdom of Urartu
.

Early life

Ekmekji was born in

Sorbonne in Paris.[1]

Academic career

Ekmekji taught archaeology, ancient religions, civilizations and cultural studies at AUB for two decades before accepting a position at Haigazian University where she has served as the Dean of Arts and Sciences since 1998.[1] She has also been a member of the National Commission for Electoral Reform (Boutros Commission 2006), Member of the Lebanese Supervisory Commission of Elections (2009, 2018).

Her research interests include electoral reform,

Kingdom of Urartu. She also works on oral histories of the Armenian genocide and gender studies (with a focus on education).[2] She published "Confessionalism and Electoral Reform in Lebanon" with the Aspen Institute in 2012.[3] She published the memoirs of her grandfather, Hagop Arsenian, a survivor of the Armenian genocide, titled Towards Golgotha.[4]

Publications

  • Towards Golgotha, The Memoirs of Hagop Arsenian, a Genocide Survivor. (HUP 2011, 2015).
  • Confessionalism and Electoral Reform in Lebanon (The Aspen Institute, July 2012)
  • Surviving Massacre: Hagop Arsenian's Armenian Journey to Jerusalem, 1915-1916 (Jerusalem Quarterly, Issue. 49, Spring 2012).
  • Revisiting artin in Beirut: How Armenians are viewed in Lebanon (Lebanese American University, 2001).
  • Les relations archéologiques entre les cités Urartéennes et les états du Nord de la Syrie entre le VIIIe et le VIe siècle [avant] [Jésus]-[Christ] , 1994- Paris I - Pantheon - Sorbonne

References

  1. ^ . Retrieved 2018-11-22.
  2. ^ "Haigazian Academics". Archived from the original on 2018-10-24. Retrieved 2018-11-22.
  3. ^ "Decisions, Divisions, and Discontent: Reforming Lebanon's Electoral Procedures". Chicago Policy Review. 2012-11-09. Retrieved 2024-03-01.
  4. ^ Mirror-Spectator, The Armenian (2012-08-06). "Dr. Arda Ekmekji Travels to West Coast For US Launch of Towards Golgotha". The Armenian Mirror-Spectator. Retrieved 2024-03-01.