Introduction
Part I. The United States, the Armenians, and the Armenian Genocide before the Genocide Convention
1. The United States and the Armenians Prior to the Genocide: The Emergence of Certain Bonds
2. The United States and the Massacres of 1915
3. From Hope to “Memory Erosion:” The United States and the Armenian Matter in the Interwar Period
Part II. The United States and the Post-WWII Armenian Awakenings
4. The United States and the Armenian Awakening of the Late 1940s
5. The United States and the Armenian Awakening of 1965
6. The United States and Turkish-Armenian Extreme Polarization in the 1970s-1980s
Part III. The First Steps of a Decades-Long Struggle for Recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the U.S. Government (1970s/1980s)
7. A Sinuous Road: The Matter of Recognition of the Armenian Genocide in the United Nations, at the White House, and in Congress in the 1970s
8. Progress and Setbacks During the Reagan Administration
9. A Case Both Emblematic and Unique: Bob Dole and Senate Joint Resolution 212 (1989-1990)
Part IV. Intensification and Diversification of the Opposition Between the Pro- and the Anti-Recognition Factions (1990s/2000s)
10. The Armenian Genocide and the U.S. Post-Cold War Context
11. George W. Bush’s First Mandate: Between Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Illusions and Armenian Efforts in Congress
12. George W. Bush’s Second Mandate and the Difficult Progress of U.S. Recognition of the Genocide
Part V. Toward Full Recognition of the Genocide: The Obama, Trump, and (Early) Biden Eras
13. High Hopes and Immense Regrets: The Genocide (Non) Recognition during the Obama Era
14. Toward Full Recognition of the Genocide in Congress—Despite the Trump Administration’s Opposition
15. “Finishing the Job”: President Biden’s Historic Recognition of the Genocide
Part VI. Why It Took the United States Fifty Years to Recognize the Armenian Genocide
16. Turkey, Geopolitics and Nonrecognition of the Armenian Genocide by the United States
17. The Nonrecognition of the Armenian Genocide: A Matter of Lobbying?
18. The Armenian Genocide and Memory Issues in the United States
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index