Lustration in Ukraine and democracy capable of defending itself

Document Type

Presentation

Source Publication

2016 Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES) Annual Convention : Global Conversations

Publication Date

11-17-2016

Publisher

Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES)

Abstract

While much scholarly attention has been paid to transitional justice measures in Central and Eastern Europe, the experiences in the Former Soviet Union have received less attention. The FSU countries are important both for the measures they adopted as well as the measures they rejected. The FSU cases provide a set of comparative cases with built in controls (post-authoritarian transitions at same moment in time, post-communist historical legacies) and with significant variation (size, scope, implementation of measures, domestic political contexts). Combined, these factors allow us to explore possible lessons about the use or abuse of transitional justice in the post-communist region. Additionally, the 25 years of transitional justice in the post-communist space in CEE have included a variety of methods used with greater and lesser success. The CEE experiences with lustration policies, trials, truth commissions, memorialization, and file access could be compared to the FSU experience, as both speak to specific post-communist transitional justice needs. Therefore this roundtable aims to consider the use or rejection of transitional justice both within the former FSU and between the FSU and CEE spaces, in order to engage a discussion of post-communist transitional justice in comparative perspective. Stan will review what we know to date about transitional justice efforts across the FSU region, Wezel and Budryte will specifically engage the Baltic region's efforts to address the communist past with particular attention to truth commissions, files, and memorialization, and Horne and David will address lustration and vetting efforts.

Language

English

Recommended Citation

David, R. (2016). Lustration in Ukraine and democracy capable of defending itself. Paper presented at 2016 Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES) Annual Convention: Global Conversations, Washington, D. C.

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