Without any doubt, Laurence Broers is one of our foremost experts on the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorny Karabakh. Broers is a scholar-practitioner who has worked for over a decade for the London-based peacebuilding organization Conciliation Resources, which for years has provided some of the best analysis of this protracted conflict. It was exciting to learn that Broers finally amalgamated his years-long experience in a book aptly titled Armenia and Azerbaijan. Anatomy of a Rivalry. The book does not disappoint: This is a superb book on the topic – nuanced, empirically rich and conceptually convincing...It is essential and highly recommended reading for everyone interested in this conflict. What’s more, it is also a very rewarding read for anyone interested in understanding protracted conflicts and how we should analyse them.
- Christopher Zürcher, University of Ottawa, Caucasus Survey
Without any doubt, Laurence Broers is one of our foremost experts on the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorny Karabakh. Broers is a scholar-practitioner who has worked for over a decade for the London-based peacebuilding organization Conciliation Resources, which for years has provided some of the best analysis of this protracted conflict. It was exciting to learn that Broers finally amalgamated his years-long experience in a book aptly titled Armenia and Azerbaijan: Anatomy of a Rivalry. The book does not disappoint: This is a superb book on the topic – nuanced, empirically rich and conceptually convincing...It is essential and highly recommended reading for everyone interested in this conflict. What’s more, it is also a very rewarding read for anyone interested in understanding protracted conflicts and how we should analyse them.
- Christopher Zürcher, University of Ottawa, Caucasus Survey
Armenia and Azerbaijan: Anatomy of a Rivalry, by Laurence Broers, is the most significant book on the conflict since Black Garden, Thomas de Waal’s 2003 account of the Nagorno-Karabakh war in the 1990s... Having traced the geopolitical visions of both sides, the balance of the book is devoted to rich, subtle reinterpretations of all of the major issues surrounding the conflict: the more than a million civilians displaced on both sides, the military balance, the roles of foreign powers and diasporas in the conflict, the nature of the de facto Nagorno-Karabakh state, and the long-running peace negotiations.
- Joshua Kucera, Eurasianet
Armenia and Azerbaijan: Anatomy of a Rivalry, by Laurence Broers, is the most significant book on the conflict since Black Garden, Thomas de Waal’s 2003 account of the Nagorno-Karabakh war in the 1990s... Having traced the geopolitical visions of both sides, the balance of the book is devoted to rich, subtle reinterpretations of all of the major issues surrounding the conflict: the more than a million civilians displaced on both sides, the military balance, the roles of foreign powers and diasporas in the conflict, the nature of the de facto Nagorno-Karabakh state, and the long-running peace negotiations.
- Joshua Kucera, Eurasianet
To understand the causes of the Second Karabakh War, which broke out on 27 September 2020, Armenia and Azerbaijan: Anatomy of a Rivalry by Laurence Broers is the best available reference.
- Vicken Cheterian, University of Geneva, Europe-Asia Studies
Broers’ book is one of the best [at] discussing the political evolution of the Karabakh conflict and it should be read by anyone who is interested in conflicts that become dormant or frozen.
- Hakan Yavuz, Nationalities Papers