— NEWS RELEASE —
WASHINGTON, Sept 18—Valery Tishkov, former Russian Minister for Nationalities and current director of the Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology at the Russian Academy of Sciences, has joined the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace as a visiting scholar with the Carnegie Russia and Eurasia Program, the Endowment announced today.
Welcoming the announcement, Ambassador James F. Collins, director of the Russia and Eurasia Program, said, “We are delighted to be expanding the collaboration between Valery Tishkov and the Carnegie Endowment that began at our Moscow Center and continues here in Washington, D.C. Dr. Tishkov, a distinguished expert on nationalism and ethnic identity in Russia, has made major contributions to understanding questions of political culture and ethnicity in Russia. His work with Carnegie will provide unique and valuable insights for the policy and scholarly communities in Washington and internationally.”
Tishkov, an expert on Russia ethnic and civic identity, previously served on the advisory board for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, was a member of the Russian State Committee on Migration Policy, and chairman of the State Committee for Nationality Affairs in the Russian government.
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Notes:
- Valery Tishkov has served as director of the Institute of
Ethnology and Anthropology, Russian Academy of Sciences, since 1989. He is also
director of the IEA Center for the Study and Management of Conflicts, and serves
as chairman of the Commission on Tolerance and Freedom of Conscience of the
Public Chamber of the Russian Federation. He is a prolific writer, having
published more than twenty books, including two encyclopedias on Russian
ethnicity. He is a member of the Public Chamber of Russia and the Global
Commission on International Migration.
- The Carnegie Russia and Eurasia
Program has been a leader in its field since the end of the Cold
War. The senior research team comprises an unparalleled group of experts in the
U.S. and Russia on Eurasian security and development, economic and social
issues, governance and the rule of law, as well as security issues such as
strategic nuclear weapons and nuclear nonproliferation. The Program has adapted
to changing policy priorities during the region’s dramatic evolution in the past
fourteen years — from the collapse of the Soviet Union, through the early phase
of post-Communist transitions, into the post-9/11 era, and the current period
under President Putin.
- The Carnegie Moscow Center was
established in 1993 and accommodates foreign and Russian researchers
collaborating with Carnegie’s global network of scholars on a variety of topical
areas and policy-relevant projects. Carnegie Moscow Center Associates work
independently on their own research in areas covering a broad range of
contemporary policy issues—military, political, and economic.
- Carnegie's www.centralasianvoices.org is a multilingual website featuring timely analysis of regional issues, and a forum enabling the exchange of ideas among policy makers, analysts, journalists, bloggers, and informed readers across the globe