Keith David Watenpaugh (born October 8, 1966) is an American academic. He is Professor of Human Rights Studies at the University of California, Davis. A leading American historian of the contemporary Middle East, human rights, and modern humanitarianism, he is an expert on the Armenian genocide and its denial, and the role of the refugee in world history.[1]
Watenpaugh is the founding director of the UC Davis Human Rights Studies Program, the first academic program of its kind in the University of California system.[2] He has been a leader of international efforts to address the needs of displaced and refugee university students and professionals, primarily those affected by the wars and civil conflicts in Syria, Iraq, and Turkey.[3]
He serves on the academic advisory board of the National Center for Free Speech and Civic Engagement;[4] and is a founding steering committee member of the University Alliance for Refugees and at-Risk Migrants[5]
He is co-editor of Karnig Panian's Goodbye, Antoura: A Memoir of the Armenian Genocide (Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, 2015). Panian was an Armenian Genocide child survivor who was held in the Ottoman orphanage at Antoura, Lebanon, where he was subjected to violent attempts at Turkification.[6]
Refugee university students and scholars
Following the 2003 American-led invasion and occupation of Iraq, he led the first investigation of conditions facing universities and research centers in Baghdad. His team's findings appear in "Opening Doors: Academic Conditions and Intellectual Life in Post-War Baghdad,"[7] which was highly critical of early American cultural and education policies in post-invasion Iraq, especially those adopted by the Coalition Provisional Authority.
Since 2013, Watenpaugh has directed a joint University of California, Davis Global Affairs and Human Rights Studies project to assist refugee university students and scholars from the war in Syria. The project has documented how refugee higher education is neglected by traditional governmental and intergovernmental refugee agencies, and has proposed new methods and techniques for their assistance, including ways to increase their mobility.[8]
With the support of the Ford Foundation and the Open Society Foundations (2017–2019), he directed the development and implementation of the Article 26 Backpack a digital/human tool that improves refugee academic document security and empowers better access to higher education opportunities.[9]
Awards and honors
Watenpaugh is a recipient (2019) of the Institute of International Education Centennial Medal in recognition of his research, advocacy, and the Article 26 Backpack.[10]
His scholarship has won multiple awards from professional organizations. His most recent book, Bread from Stones, is an Ahmanson Foundation Book in the Humanities;[15] and won honorable mention (2016) in the Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association Norris & Carol Hundley Award competition.[16]
Bread From Stones: The Middle East and the Making of Modern Humanitarianism (Oakland: University of California Press, 2015)[1]
Being Modern in the Middle East: Revolution, Colonialism, Nationalism and the Arab Middle Class, (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006.) [2]
"The League of Nations' Rescue of Armenian Genocide Survivors and the Making of Modern Humanitarianism, 1920-1927," American Historical Review, 115:5, (December 2010).[18]
"Syria's Lost Generation" Chronicle of Higher Education, (June, 2013).[19]
"The Article 26 Backpack Digital Platform Empowers Refugee Students," IIE Networker (Spring 2018)
[20]
"A Matter of Rights Professor shares his efforts to help refugees access higher education" University of California News [21]
"We Will Stop Here and Go No Further: Syrian University Students and Scholars in Turkey" (2014)[22]
Ottoman History Podcast, Syrian University Students and the Impacts of War (2014)[23]
Ottoman History Podcast Interview with Chris GratienThe Middle East in the Making of Modern Humanitarianism (2015)[24]
"Why Trump's Executive Order Is Wrongheaded and Reckless," Chronicle of Higher Education, (January, 2017) [3]
"A Fragile Glasnost on the Tigris" Middle East Report 228: Fall 2003.[4]Archived 2003-12-10 at the Wayback Machine
"Middle East Brain Drain," National Public Radio's Talk of the Nation - 11/22/2006 [5]