Ukraine after the Revolution of Dignity and Imperial Aggression (original) (raw)

CFA Summerschool in Ukraine - Memories and Legacies of Revolutions Continuity and Disruption, 19th-21st centuries

Call for applications for the Ninth International Social Science Summer School in Ukraine, Zaporizhzhya, 25-30 June 2018. A joint project of the Chair of Ukrainian Studies at the University of Ottawa (Canada), the Institut des Sciences Sociales du Politique (France), The Center for Slavic History at the University of Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne (France), the LabEx “Writing a new History of Europe” (France), The Center Marc Bloch (Germany), The Zaporizhzhya National University (Ukraine). The Summer school is supported by the Wolodymyr George Danyliw Foundation (Canada), the Embassy of France in Ukraine, the LabEx EHNE (France) and the Center Marc Bloch (Germany) .

Revolution in Ukraine: Take three. Eurozine, 28 February 2014.

The main threat to the revolution comes not from Crimean separatism nor from far−right groups. The biggest threat comes from within: from old habits and oldboy networks. New politicians are needed to avoid repeating the missed opportunities of 1991 and 2004.

THE END OF POST-SOVIET UKRAINE: MEANINGS AND OUTCOMES OF THE REVOLUTION OF 2013–14 1

The Process of Politicization: How Much Politics Does a Society Need?, 2017

Why did Ukrainians take to the streets in 2013-2014? How can we understand the seemingly extreme behaviour among the normally calm and peaceful Ukrainian citizens? What are the main differences between the“Euromaidan” in 2013–14 and previous protests, such as the Orange Revolution in 2004? Was the crisis in Ukraine in 2013–14 a new geopolitical battle between “East” and “West”? Or was it the end of post-Soviet Ukraine? The main assumption of the present study is that the recent events in Ukraine were the result of the unfinished transformations and modernisations of this post-Soviet state.

Ukraine's Path to Freedom: Reflections in Times of War

2022

This essay is focused on overview of the results of 30 years of Ukraine's independence. It describes its path from the collapse of the USSR to the present day and explains the prerequisites for a full-scale war Russia started against Ukraine.

Book review: From “The Ukraine” to Ukraine: A Contemporary History, 1991–2021. Ed. Mykhailo Minakov, Georgiy Kasianov, and Matthew Rojansky. ibidem-Verlag, Stuttgart, 2021. 386 pp.

Slavic Review, 2023

Book review: From “The Ukraine” to Ukraine: A Contemporary History, 1991–2021. Ed. Mykhailo Minakov, Georgiy Kasianov, and Matthew Rojansky. ibidem-Verlag, Stuttgart, 2021. 386 pp.

Lysiak Rudnytsky’s prescience: Ukraine’s political turbulence and trauma of a “non-historical” nation

Lysiak Rudnytsky’s prescience: Ukraine’s political turbulence and trauma of a “non-historical” nation, 2019

If we look at the past three decades in the history of Eastern Europe, Ukraine may safely be placed at the top of the chart of “unstable” states. First was the student-led Revolution on Granite in the 1990s. The outcome of that revolution was a resignation of entrenched high-ranked Soviet officials under the pressure of public opinion. Then, if we skip the 1999 anti-Kuchma protests, the next big upheaval was the Orange Revolution in 2003–04. It led to a rerun of the presidential election and eventual reboot of the government. Finally, the massive and blood-soaked EuroMaidan, or Revolution of Dignity, happened in 2013–14—which, once again, led to a drastic change in Ukraine’s ruling elites.

Ukrainian threefold revolution : from Soviet Ukraine to European Ukraine?

2016

What does it mean "the crisis" in Ukraine in 2013-2014? Is it a new geopolitical battle between 'East' and 'West' only? Or it is the end of 'post Soviet' Ukraine? There are two dimensions of possible discussions: first, from geopolitical perspective-Ukraine as a battleground between Russia and the 'West'. Much of the coverage portrays the Ukrainian Euromaidan revolution 2013-2014 as a resurgence of the Cold War-a battle between 'East' and 'West'. The second, Ukrainian Euromaidanis the end of post Soviet transformations and was the natural protest of Ukrainians against authoritarian rules of President Yanukovych. I would claim that the main reason of Euromaidan protests in 2013-2014 was an unfinished Ukrainian transformation from 'post-Soviet' state toward a real democratic and independent Ukraine. It was a threefold revolution: democraticin the sense of protests against cleptocratic and oligarchic regimes of Victor Yanukovych; anti-colonialin the sense of struggle for real independence from Russia; and value revolutionin the sense of struggle of European Ukraine vs Soviet Ukraine, which are differing on the basis of relations towards state, sovereignty and the past. Was it really 'revolution' or notwe will see soon, according to results and prospects of reforming of Ukrainian political system.