Announcing the Mattone Center for Law and Religion

We have exciting news to share! In recognition of a transformative gift to endow the Center’s activities, the St. John’s Center for Law and Religion has been renamed in honor of alumni Denise Melillo Mattone and Michael X. Mattone. The multimillion-dollar gift will allow the Center to offer new educational programs and expand its impact as a hub for exploring issues of law and religion in the United States and around the world. 

The newly named Denise ‘90 and Michael ‘91 Mattone Center for Law and Religion will offer educational opportunities, including innovative coursework, a visiting scholars program, and academic workshops and conferences at St. John’s campuses in New York, Paris, and Rome. It will also host programs for St. John’s alumni and the wider public, including podcasts, videos, and live events on pressing church-state issues. 

You can read more about the Mattones in the official announcement, here.

We are tremendously grateful to Denise and Michael for their confidence in us and are honored that the Center now bears their names. Stay tuned for further announcement about upcoming events in the new year!

Christians and US Policy on Armenia

At SSRN, I’ve posted a draft essay on the role of Christian interest groups in U.S. policy toward Armenia, historically and today. The draft, which I wrote this past summer before the ethnic cleansing of Nagorno Karabakh, will appear in a forthcoming collection of essays, Armenia and the Community of States (Georgi Asatryan ed.) (forthcoming 2024). Here’s the abstract:

International Relations scholarship has begun to focus on the influence of religious interest groups on foreign policy. In this draft, written in the summer of 2024 for a forthcoming collection of essays, I explore the impact of Christian groups on United States policy on Armenia, historically and today. During the Armenian Genocide 100 years ago, Christian groups mobilized a massive private relief campaign for Armenians but could not secure U.S. government support for the fledgling Armenian Republic. Today, Christian groups are trying once again to secure greater U.S. support for Armenia in connection with the Karabakh conflict. Although these groups have achieved some success, in the current domestic and geopolitical climate, securing greater U.S. government support has proven challenging—even in the context of an ethnic cleansing campaign. If Christian groups are to succeed, history suggests they must find a way to cast their arguments principally in terms of U.S. interests in the changing South Caucasus rather than humanitarian concerns or Christian solidarity.