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On diaspora bonds

From a quick fix to a complexity of sovereign debt and international capital markets: the idea of funding economic development with diaspora bonds captivates many despite its many pitfalls.

February 3, 2026 Aleksandr V. Gevorkyan

Book Review: The Armenian experience: From ancient times to independence

  This is a reprint from an earlier publication. To cite the original article: Artyom Tonoyan (2024): The Armenian experience: From ancient times to independence, Eurasian Geography and Economics, 65(8), 998–1000. https://doi.org/10.1080/15387216.2022.2122529 The Armenian experience: From ancient times to independence by Gaïdz Minassian (translated by Peter Gillespie), London and New York, I.B., Tauris, 2020, 288 pp., […]

February 20, 2026 Artyom Tonoyan

How My Dissertation Went Terribly, Wonderfully Wrong

When I arrived at St. John’s University to begin my PhD in history, my plan was to be a modernist. In my application, I had enthusiastically proposed to study modern perceptions of Middle Eastern women. I labored under this plan for two full academic years, all the while fulfilling my coursework requirements. One afternoon, I […]

February 24, 2026 Ashley Bozian

The overlooked: small open post-socialist economies in between the Global North and Global South

[originally published in Prose on the Rocks] by Aleksandr V. Gevorkyan These days there are three popular ways to speak of the small economies that have gone through the1990s market transition reforms in the former socialist Europe, Caucasus, and Central Asia. The first approach is to politely suggest that those countries have long since transitioned […]

February 13, 2026 Aleksandr V. Gevorkyan