IREX Visiting Fellow to Spend Semester
Studying NGOs at ASP
Tatevik Ekezian
staff writer
Dr. Harutyun Aleksanyan from Yerevan, Armenia,
is visiting California State University, Fresno on an IREX Contemporary
Issues Fellowship. His three-month stay, formally hosted by the Armenian
Studies Program, began August 29, following a three day orientation
in Washington DC. Barlow Der Mugrdechian of the Armenian Studies Program
is acting as faculty sponsor/advisor for Dr. Aleksanyan while he is
in Fresno. Dr. Aleksanyan will participate in a one-month internship
in Los Angeles to conclude his stay in the United States.
Dr. Aleksanyan is the president of the Elegia Cultural non-governmental
organization. He is also an institutional assessor for the NGO Strengthening
Program of the World Learning Organization in Armenia. He also taught
history of the Armenian Diaspora and modern world history at the David
Anhakht Humanitarian University in Yerevan.
Dr. Aleksanyan is delighted to share his experiences with non-governmental
organizations (NGOs). His purpose in coming to the United States
is to get acquainted with how non-profit organizations function. Since
NGOs are relatively new in Armenia, he intends to investigate how
NGOs in the United States function. He is studying the related literature
in the field as well.
He wants to help Armenia with its NGOs and their improvement in development,
challenges, and perspectives. Most NGOs in Armenia are dealing directly
with social issues. Each is basically set up as a union of people
who work to improve the countrys social and environmental problems.
Dr. Aleksanyan hopes to be able to return to Armenia with a compatible
paradigm from the United States that he can implement in his native
land. This way, he hopes the model he puts together after his analysis
and research in the United States can improve the organizational capacity
of NGOs in Armenia. For example, Armenian NGO governance, operational
and management systems, human resources, financial resources, service
delivery, external relations, and advocacy would all improve tremendously.
The NGOs in Armenia are in their developing stages. Dr. Aleksanyan
wants to work to help increase organizational skills by providing
training and the understanding and application of better skills in
these organizations. He wants to acquire skills and go back to Armenia
to apply what he has learned and to teach and train others.
While in Fresno, Dr. Aleksanyan has attended several seminars in personnel
development, grant writing and management, and financial control.
He has focused especially on financial control because there is a
lack of fundraising strategies in Armenia. He is sitting in on a variety
of courses at the university, including a course in non-profit management.
As an international guest he was invited to participate in a Fresno
area Non-Profit Organizations in the 21st Century conference.
Dr. Aleksanyan is President of Elegia NGO, whose main
purpose is to support the development of Armenian culture; to assist
and facilitate creative groups, talented artists, and children active
in culture; to facilitate the development of capacity building in
the area of art business; and to preserve and develop the culture
of national minorities. Elegia also helps talented children
involved in culture and contributes to creating cultural networks
nationally and internationally as well. They have created programs
with Georgia and Azerbaijan, and have put together joint projects
to create organizational networks, exhibitions, and concerts, hoping
that all these activities will assist in political stability in the
region.
Dr. Aleksanyan plans to share his experience in Armenia, doing assessments
using the IAI (Institutional Analysis Instrumental) method, developed
by World Learning Organization, to establish each non-governmental
stage of development.
Dr. Aleksanyan has lectured to an Armenian Studies class at Fresno
State and he discussed Advocacy and Coalition Building
to a group of students from the American Humanics Program at Fresno
State. He also went on a field trip with students to the Stone
Soup NGO in Fresno to conduct an assessment of the organization.
The reason Dr. Aleksanyan believes that the United States can set
good examples for the NGOs in Armenia to follow is because Americas
civil society has been developed over a long period of time, and Armenias
civil society only since its independence in 1991.