%0 Journal Article %T §®§Ñ§Ý§î§é§Ú§Ü§Ú-§Þ§Ñ§Ø§à§â§í §Ü§Ñ§â§Ñ§Ò§Ñ§ç§ã§Ü§à§Û §Ó§à§Û§ß§í: §Ø§Ú§Ù§ß§Ö§ß§ß§í§Ö §Ú§ã§ä§à§â§Ú§Ú §Ó§à§Ö§ß§ß§à§Û §Þ§à§Ý§à§Õ§×§Ø§Ú [ChildsoldiersoftheKarabakhWar: Life Stories of a Militarised ¡° Youth ¡±]. %A §¯§à§ß§Ñ §º§Ñ§ç§ß§Ñ§Ù§Ñ§â§ñ§ß / Nona Shakhnazarian %J Journal of Power Institutions in Post-Soviet Societies %D 2008 %I Centre d'Etudes et de Recherche sur les Soci¨¦t¨¦s et les Institutions Post-Sovi¨¦tiques %X The article deals with young veterans of the Karabakh War (1991-1994). It is focused on ordinary teenagers whose lives became part of warfare. The harsh, shocking hardships they experienced during the war are far from being named ¡°youth culture of leisure¡± (that is to say youth sub/contra culture as a social phenomenon, rather than biological age scale). It seems that those adolescents have skipped a stage of their lives. The article touches upon the young veterans¡¯ Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) syndrom and how they try to overcome it. Some of them are still traumatized by the consequences of war after more than a decade. Some have undergone identity-transformations that affect their present life trajectories. %K Child Soldiers %K Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder %K Armenia %K Karabakh %U http://pipss.revues.org/1743