Ukraine

Ukraine
/yooh krayn", -kruyn", yooh"krayn/, n.
a republic in SE Europe: rich agricultural and industrial region. 50,684,635; 223,090 sq. mi. (603,700 sq. km). Cap.: Kiev. Russian, Ukraina. Formerly, Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.

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Ukraine

Introduction Ukraine
Background: Richly endowed in natural resources, Ukraine has been fought over and subjugated for centuries; its 20th- century struggle for liberty is not yet complete. A short-lived independence from Russia (1917-1920) was followed by brutal Soviet rule that engineered two artificial famines (1921-22 and 1932-33) in which over 8 million died, and World War II, in which German and Soviet armies were responsible for some 7 million more deaths. Although independence was attained in 1991 with the dissolution of the USSR, true freedom remains elusive as many of the former Soviet elite remain entrenched, stalling efforts at economic reform, privatization, and civil liberties. Geography Ukraine -
Location: Eastern Europe, bordering the Black Sea, between Poland and Russia
Geographic coordinates: 49 00 N, 32 00 E
Map references: Asia, Europe
Area: total: 603,700 sq km water: 0 sq km land: 603,700 sq km
Area - comparative: slightly smaller than Texas
Land boundaries: total: 4,663 km border countries: Belarus 891 km, Hungary 103 km, Moldova 939 km, Poland 526 km, Romania (south) 169 km, Romania (west) 362 km, Russia 1,576 km, Slovakia 97 km
Coastline: 2,782 km
Maritime claims: continental shelf: 200-m or to the depth of exploitation exclusive economic zone: 200 NM territorial sea: 12 NM
Climate: temperate continental; Mediterranean only on the southern Crimean coast; precipitation disproportionately distributed, highest in west and north, lesser in east and southeast; winters vary from cool along the Black Sea to cold farther inland; summers are warm across the greater part of the country, hot in the south
Terrain: most of Ukraine consists of fertile plains (steppes) and plateaus, mountains being found only in the west (the Carpathians), and in the Crimean Peninsula in the extreme south
Elevation extremes: lowest point: Black Sea 0 m highest point: Hora Hoverla 2,061 m
Natural resources: iron ore, coal, manganese, natural gas, oil, salt, sulfur, graphite, titanium, magnesium, kaolin, nickel, mercury, timber, arable land
Land use: arable land: 57.1% permanent crops: 1.73% other: 41.17% (1998 est.)
Irrigated land: 24,540 sq km (1998 est.)
Natural hazards: NA Environment - current issues: inadequate supplies of potable water; air and water pollution; deforestation; radiation contamination in the northeast from 1986 accident at Chornobyl' Nuclear Power Plant Environment - international party to: Air Pollution, Air
agreements: Pollution-Nitrogen Oxides, Air Pollution-Sulphur 85, Antarctic- Marine Living Resources, Antarctic Treaty, Biodiversity, Climate Change, Endangered Species, Environmental Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Marine Dumping, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution, Wetlands signed, but not ratified: Air Pollution-Persistent Organic Pollutants, Air Pollution-Sulphur 94, Air Pollution-Volatile Organic Compounds, Antarctic-Environmental Protocol, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol
Geography - note: strategic position at the crossroads between Europe and Asia; second- largest country in Europe People Ukraine
Population: 48,396,470 (July 2002 est.)
Age structure: 0-14 years: 16.8% (male 4,147,344; female 3,970,343) 15-64 years: 68.7% (male 15,881,821; female 17,366,172) 65 years and over: 14.5% (male 2,341,885; female 4,688,905) (2002 est.)
Population growth rate: -0.72% (2002 est.)
Birth rate: 9.59 births/1,000 population (2002 est.)
Death rate: 16.4 deaths/1,000 population (2002 est.)
Net migration rate: -0.42 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2002 est.)
Sex ratio: at birth: 1.05 male(s)/female under 15 years: 1.04 male(s)/female 15-64 years: 0.91 male(s)/female 65 years and over: 0.5 male(s)/ female total population: 0.86 male(s)/ female (2002 est.)
Infant mortality rate: 21.14 deaths/1,000 live births (2002 est.) Life expectancy at birth: total population: 66.33 years female: 72.06 years (2002 est.) male: 60.86 years
Total fertility rate: 1.32 children born/woman (2002 est.) HIV/AIDS - adult prevalence rate: 0.96% (1999 est.) HIV/AIDS - people living with HIV/ 240,000 (1999 est.)
AIDS:
HIV/AIDS - deaths: 4,000 (1999 est.)
Nationality: noun: Ukrainian(s) adjective: Ukrainian
Ethnic groups: Ukrainian 73%, Russian 22%, Jewish 1%, other 4%
Religions: Ukrainian Orthodox - Moscow Patriarchate, Ukrainian Orthodox - Kiev Patriarchate, Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox, Ukrainian Catholic (Uniate), Protestant, Jewish
Languages: Ukrainian, Russian, Romanian, Polish, Hungarian
Literacy: definition: age 15 and over can read and write total population: 98% male: 100% female: 97% (1989 est.) Government Ukraine
Country name: conventional long form: none conventional short form: Ukraine local long form: none former: Ukrainian National Republic, Ukrainian State, Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic local short form: Ukrayina
Government type: republic
Capital: Kiev (Kyyiv) Administrative divisions: 24 oblasti (singular - oblast'), 1 autonomous republic* (avtomnaya respublika), and 2 municipalities (mista, singular - misto) with oblast status**; Cherkas'ka (Cherkasy), Chernihivs'ka (Chernihiv), Chernivets'ka (Chernivtsi), Dnipropetrovs'ka (Dnipropetrovs'k), Donets'ka (Donets'k), Ivano-Frankivs'ka (Ivano-Frankivs'k), Kharkivs'ka (Kharkiv), Khersons'ka (Kherson), Khmel'nyts'ka (Khmel'nyts'kyy), Kirovohrads'ka (Kirovohrad), Kyyiv**, Kyyivs'ka (Kiev), Luhans'ka (Luhans'k), L'vivs'ka (L'viv), Mykolayivs'ka (Mykolayiv), Odes'ka (Odesa), Poltavs'ka (Poltava), Avtonomna Respublika Krym* (Simferopol'), Rivnens'ka (Rivne), Sevastopol'**, Sums'ka (Sumy), Ternopil's'ka (Ternopil'), Vinnyts'ka (Vinnytsya), Volyns'ka (Luts'k), Zakarpats'ka (Uzhhorod), Zaporiz'ka (Zaporizhzhya), Zhytomyrs'ka (Zhytomyr); note - when using a place name with an adjectival ending 's'ka' or 'z'ka,' the word Oblast' should be added to the place name note: oblasts have the administrative center name following in parentheses
Independence: 24 August 1991 (from Soviet Union)
National holiday: Independence Day, 24 August (1991)
Constitution: adopted 28 June 1996
Legal system: based on civil law system; judicial review of legislative acts
Suffrage: 18 years of age; universal
Executive branch: chief of state: President Leonid D. KUCHMA (since 19 July 1994) head of government: Prime Minister Anatoliy KINAKH (since 29 May 2001), First Deputy Prime Minister Oleh DUBYNA (since 29 May 2001) cabinet: Cabinet of Ministers appointed by the president and approved by the Supreme Council elections: president elected by popular vote for a five-year term; election last held 31 October and 14 November 1999 (next to be held NA 2004); prime minister and deputy prime ministers appointed by the president and approved by the Supreme Council election results: Leonid D. KUCHMA elected president; percent of vote - Leonid KUCHMA 57.7%, Petro SYMONENKO 38.8% note: there is also a National Security and Defense Council or NSDC originally created in 1992 as the National Security Council, but significantly revamped and strengthened under President KUCHMA; the NSDC staff is tasked with developing national security policy on domestic and international matters and advising the president; a Presidential Administration that helps draft presidential edicts and provides policy support to the president; and a Council of Regions that serves as an advisory body created by President KUCHMA in September 1994 that includes chairmen of the Kyyiv (Kiev) and Sevastopol' municipalities and chairmen of the oblasti
Legislative branch: unicameral Supreme Council or Verkhovna Rada (450 seats; under Ukraine's new election law, 225 of the Supreme Council's seats are allocated on a proportional basis to those parties that gain 4% or more of the national electoral vote; the other 225 members are elected by popular vote in single-mandate constituencies; all serve four-year terms) election results: percent of vote by party - Our Ukraine 24%, For One Ukraine 12%, CPU 20%, Social- Democratic Party of Ukraine 6%, SPU 7%, Juliya Tymochenko Election Bloc 7%, other 24%; seats by party - Our Ukraine 112, For One Ukraine 101, CPU 67, Social-Democratic Party of Ukraine 24, SPU 23, Juliya Tymochenko Election Bloc 21, Democratic Party of Ukraine 4, Unity 3, others 95 elections: last held 31 March 2002 (next to be held NA 2006)
Judicial branch: Supreme Court; Constitutional Court Political parties and leaders: Agrarian Party [Mykhaylo HLADIY]; Communist Party of Ukraine or CPU [Petro SYMONENKO]; Democratic Union [Oleksandr OMELCHENKO]; Fatherland (Motherland) All Ukrainian Party [Yuliya TYMOSHENKO, chairperson]; For One Ukraine [leader NA]; Green Party of Ukraine or PZU [Vitaliy KONONOV, chairman]; Juliya Tymochenko Election Bloc [leader NA]; Liberal Party [Volodymyr SHCHERBAN]; Our Ukraine [leader NA]; Party of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs [Anatoliy KINAKH]; Party of Regions [Volodymyr SEMYNOZHENKO]; Party of Ukrainian Unity [Ivan BILAS]; Peasant Party of Ukraine or SelPU [Serhiy DOVHAN]; People's Democratic Party or PDP [Valeriy PUSTOVOYTENKO, chairman]; People's Movement of Ukraine or Rukh U [Hennadiy UDOVENKO, chairman]; Progressive Socialist Party [Nataliya VITRENKO]; Reforms Congress [Viktor PYNZENYK]; Social- Democratic Party of Ukraine (United) [Viktor MEDVEDCHUK]; Socialist Party of Ukraine or SPU [Oleksandr MOROZ, chairman]; Solidarity [Petro POROSHENKO]; Trudova Ukrayina/ Working Ukraine [Viktor PINCHUK, chairman]; Ukrainian Popular Movement or Rukh K [Yuriy KOSTENKO, chairman]; Unity [Oleksandr OMELCHENKO]; Working Ukraine/Labort Ukraine [Serhiy TYHYPKO]; Yabluko [BRODSKY] note: and numerous smaller parties Political pressure groups and NA
leaders: International organization BSEC, CCC, CE, CEI, CIS, EAPC, EBRD,
participation: ECE, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICRM, IFC, IFRCS, IHO, ILO, IMF, IMO, Interpol, IOC, IOM, ISO, ITU, MONUC, NAM (observer), NSG, OAS (observer), OPCW, OSCE, PCA, PFP, UN, UNAMSIL, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNIDO, UNIFIL, UNMEE, UNMIBH, UNMIK, UNMOP, UNMOT, UNMOVIC, UPU, WCL, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WToO, WTrO (observer), ZC Diplomatic representation in the US: chief of mission: Ambassador Konstantin Ivanovych HRYSHCHENKO FAX: [1] (202) 333-0817 consulate(s) general: Chicago and New York telephone: [1] (202) 333-0606 chancery: 3350 M Street NW, Washington, DC 20007 Diplomatic representation from the chief of mission: Ambassador Carlos
US: PASCUAL embassy: 10 Yurii Kotsiubynskyi Street, Kiev 01901 mailing address: use embassy street address telephone: [380] (44) 490-4000 FAX: [380] (44) 244-7350
Flag description: two equal horizontal bands of azure (top) and golden yellow represent grainfields under a blue sky Economy Ukraine -
Economy - overview: After Russia, the Ukrainian republic was far and away the most important economic component of the former Soviet Union, producing about four times the output of the next-ranking republic. Its fertile black soil generated more than one-fourth of Soviet agricultural output, and its farms provided substantial quantities of meat, milk, grain, and vegetables to other republics. Likewise, its diversified heavy industry supplied the unique equipment (for example, large diameter pipes) and raw materials to industrial and mining sites (vertical drilling apparatus) in other regions of the former USSR. Ukraine depends on imports of energy, especially natural gas, to meet some 85% of its annual energy requirements. Shortly after independence in late 1991, the Ukrainian Government liberalized most prices and erected a legal framework for privatization, but widespread resistance to reform within the government and the legislature soon stalled reform efforts and led to some backtracking. Output by 1999 had fallen to less than 40% the 1991 level. Loose monetary policies pushed inflation to hyperinflationary levels in late 1993. Ukraine's dependence on Russia for energy supplies and the lack of significant structural reform have made the Ukrainian economy vulnerable to external shocks. Now in his second term, President KUCHMA has pledged to reduce the number of government agencies, streamline the regulatory process, create a legal environment to encourage entrepreneurs, and enact a comprehensive tax overhaul. Reforms in the more politically sensitive areas of structural reform and land privatization are still lagging. Outside institutions - particularly the IMF - have encouraged Ukraine to quicken the pace and scope of reforms and have threatened to withdraw financial support. GDP in 2000 showed strong export-based growth of 6% - the first growth since independence - and industrial production grew 12.9%. The economy continued to expand in 2001 as real GDP rose 9% and industrial output grew by over 14%. Growth was undergirded by strong domestic demand and growing consumer and investor confidence.
GDP: purchasing power parity - $205 billion (2001 est.)
GDP - real growth rate: 9% (2001 est.)
GDP - per capita: purchasing power parity - $4,200 (2001 est.) GDP - composition by sector: agriculture: 13% industry: 40% services: 47% (2000 est.) Population below poverty line: 29% (2001 est.) Household income or consumption by lowest 10%: 3.7%
percentage share: highest 10%: 23.2% (1999) Distribution of family income - Gini 30 (1999)
index: Inflation rate (consumer prices): 12% (2001 est.)
Labor force: 22.8 million (yearend 1997) Labor force - by occupation: industry 32%, agriculture 24%, services 44% (1996)
Unemployment rate: 3.6% officially registered; large number of unregistered or underemployed workers (November 2001)
Budget: revenues: $10.2 billion expenditures: $11.1 billion, including capital expenditures of $NA (2002 est.)
Industries: coal, electric power, ferrous and nonferrous metals, machinery and transport equipment, chemicals, food processing (especially sugar) Industrial production growth rate: 14.2% (2001 est.) Electricity - production: 163.57 billion kWh (2000) Electricity - production by source: fossil fuel: 49.54% hydro: 7.02% other: 0.01% (2000) nuclear: 43.44% Electricity - consumption: 151.72 billion kWh (2000)
Electricity - exports: 400 million kWh (2000)
Electricity - imports: 0 kWh (2000)
Agriculture - products: grain, sugar beets, sunflower seeds, vegetables; beef, milk
Exports: $17.3 billion (2001 est.)
Exports - commodities: ferrous and nonferrous metals, fuel and petroleum products, machinery and transport equipment, food products
Exports - partners: Russia 22.6%, Turkey 6.2%, Italy 5.1%, Germany (2001 est.)
Imports: $17.1 billion (2001 est.)
Imports - commodities: energy, machinery and parts, transportation equipment, chemicals
Imports - partners: Russia 36.9%, Turkmenistan 10.5%, Germany 8.7%, US (2001 est.)
Debt - external: $11.8 billion (2001) Economic aid - recipient: $637.7 million (1995); IMF Extended Funds Facility $2.2 billion (1998)
Currency: hryvnia (UAH)
Currency code: UAH
Exchange rates: hryvnia per US dollar - 5.3126 (January 2002), 5.3722 (2001), 5.4402 (2000), 4.1304 (1999), 2.4495 (1998), 1.8617 (1997)
Fiscal year: calendar year Communications Ukraine Telephones - main lines in use: 9.45 million (April 1999) Telephones - mobile cellular: 236,000 (1998)
Telephone system: general assessment: Ukraine's telecommunication development plan, running through 2005, emphasizes improving domestic trunk lines, international connections, and the mobile cellular system domestic: at independence in December 1991, Ukraine inherited a telephone system that was antiquated, inefficient, and in disrepair; more than 3.5 million applications for telephones could not be satisfied; telephone density is now rising slowly and the domestic trunk system is being improved; the mobile cellular telephone system is expanding at a high rate international: two new domestic trunk lines are a part of the fiber- optic Trans-Asia-Europe (TAE) system and three Ukrainian links have been installed in the fiber-optic Trans- European Lines (TEL) project which connects 18 countries; additional international service is provided by the Italy-Turkey-Ukraine-Russia (ITUR) fiber-optic submarine cable and by earth stations in the Intelsat, Inmarsat, and Intersputnik satellite systems Radio broadcast stations: AM 134, FM 289, shortwave 4 (1998)
Radios: 45.05 million (1997) Television broadcast stations: at least 33 (plus 21 repeaters that relay broadcasts from Russia) (1997)
Televisions: 18.05 million (1997)
Internet country code: .ua Internet Service Providers (ISPs): 260 (2001)
Internet users: 750,000 (2001) Transportation Ukraine
Railways: total: 22,510 km broad gauge: 21,951 km 1.524-m gauge (8,927 km electrified) standard gauge: 49 km 1.435-m gauge note: these data do not include railroads dedicated to serving industry and not in common carrier service (2001) narrow gauge: 510 km 0.750-m gauge
Highways: total: 273,700 km paved: 236,400 km (including 1,770 km of expressways and a substantial amount of all-weather roads with gravel surfaces) unpaved: 37,300 km (these roads are made of unstabilized earth and are difficult to negotiate in wet weather) (1990)
Waterways: 4,499 km note: 1,672 km are on the Pryp'yat' and Dniester (Dnister) (1990)
Pipelines: crude oil 4,000 km (1995); petroleum products 4,500 km (1995); natural gas 34,400 km (1998)
Ports and harbors: Berdyans'k, Feodosiya, Illichivs'k, Izmayil, Kerch, Kherson, Kiev (Kyyiv), Kiliya, Mariupol', Mykolayiv, Odesa, Reni, Sevastopol', Yalta, Yuzhnyy
Merchant marine: total: 138 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 669,303 GRT/707,857 DWT ships by type: bulk 7, cargo 100, container 3, liquefied gas 2, passenger 11, passenger/cargo 1, petroleum tanker 12, railcar carrier 2 note: includes some foreign-owned ships registered here as a flag of convenience: Cyprus 1, Greece 1, Panama 1, Russia 4, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1 (2002 est.)
Airports: 718 (2001) Airports - with paved runways: total: 114 over 3,047 m: 14 2,438 to 3,047 m: 50 1,524 to 2,437 m: 21 914 to 1,523 m: 3 under 914 m: 26 (2001) Airports - with unpaved runways: total: 604 over 3,047 m: 13 2,438 to 3,047 m: 37 1,524 to 2,437 m: 52 914 to 1,523 m: 45 under 914 m: 457 (2001) Military Ukraine
Military branches: Ground Forces, Naval Forces, Air Force, Air Defense Forces, Interior Troops, Border Troops Military manpower - military age: 18 years of age (2002 est.) Military manpower - availability: males age 15-49: 12,263,178 (2002 est.) Military manpower - fit for military males age 15-49: 9,616,864 (2002
service: est.) Military manpower - reaching military males: 390,823 (2002 est.)
age annually: Military expenditures - dollar $500 million (FY99)
figure: Military expenditures - percent of 1.4% (FY99)
GDP: Transnational Issues Ukraine Disputes - international: Ukraine and Romania have yet to resolve claims over Ukrainian- administered Zmiyinyy (Snake) Island and delimitation of Black Sea maritime boundary, despite 1997 bilateral treaty to find a solution in two years and numerous talks; Russia and Ukraine have successfully delimited land boundary in 2001, but disagree on delimitation of maritime boundary in the Sea of Azov and Black Sea; Moldovan difficulties with break-away Transnistria region inhibit establishment of a joint customs regime with Ukraine to curtail smuggling, arms transfers, and other illegal activities
Illicit drugs: limited cultivation of cannabis and opium poppy, mostly for CIS consumption; some synthetic drug production for export to West; limited government eradication program; used as transshipment point for opiates and other illicit drugs from Africa, Latin America, and Turkey, and to Europe and Russia; drug-related money laundering a minor, but growing, problem

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Country, southeastern Europe.

Area: 233,100 sq mi (603,700 sq km). Population (2002 est.): 48,628,000. Capital: Kiev. Ethnic Ukrainians make up 70% of the population; minorities include Russians and Jews. Languages: Ukrainian (official), Russian, Romanian, Polish, Hungarian. Religions: Christianity, Judaism, Islam. Currency: hryvny. Ukraine consists of level plains and the Carpathian Mountains, which extend through the western region for more than 150 mi (240 km). The Bug (Western Bug), Dnieper (Dnipro), Donets, and Dniester (Dnistro) are its major rivers. The Donets Basin in the east-central region is one of the major heavy-industrial and mining-metallurgical complexes of Europe. It mines iron ore and coal and produces natural gas, petroleum, iron, and steel. Ukraine is a major producer of winter wheat and sugar beets. It is a republic with one legislative body; its head of state is the president, and the head of government is the prime minister. Different parts of the area were invaded and occupied in the 1st millennium BC by the Cimmerians, Scythians, and Sarmatians and in the 1st millennium AD by the Goths, Huns, Bulgars, Avars, Khazars, and Magyars. Slavic tribes settled there after the 4th century. Kiev was its chief town. The Mongol conquest in the mid-13th century decisively ended Kievan power. Ruled by Lithuania in the 14th century and Poland in the 16th century, it fell to Russian rule in the 18th century. The Ukrainian National Republic, established in 1917, declared its independence from Soviet Russia in 1918 but was reconquered in 1919; it was made the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic of the U.S.S.R. in 1923. The northwestern region was held by Poland (1919–39). Ukraine suffered a severe famine in 1932–33 under Soviet leader Joseph Stalin; more than five million Ukrainians died of starvation in an unprecedented peacetime catastrophe. Overrun by Axis armies in 1941 during World War II, it was further devastated before being retaken by the Soviets in 1944. In 1986 it was the site of the Chernobyl accident, at a Soviet-built nuclear power plant. It declared independence in 1991.

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▪ 2009

Area:
603,628 sq km (233,062 sq mi)
Population
(2008 est.): 46,222,000
Capital:
Kiev
Chief of state:
President Viktor Yushchenko
Head of government:
Prime Minister Yuliya Tymoshenko

      The year 2008 in Ukraine was marked by fractious disputes between parliamentary leaders and Pres. Viktor Yushchenko. In September the parliamentary alliance between the president's Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense bloc and the prime minister's eponymous Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc collapsed. The ostensible reason was the divided response to the war that broke out in Georgia in August. Whereas Yushchenko condemned Russia's presence in Georgia and reportedly authorized military aid to Georgian Pres. Mikhail Saakashvili, Yuliya Tymoshenko (Tymoshenko, Yuliya ) took a neutral position and met with Russian Pres. Dmitry Medvedev in Moscow on October 3. A second reason concerned efforts by Tymoshenko and rival political leader Viktor Yanukovych of the Regions Party to reduce the power of the president via a constitutional amendment. The impasse was resolved in early December by the formation of a new parliamentary coalition that included members of Yushchenko's and Tymoshenko's blocs, as well as delegates supporting Speaker Volodymyr Lytvyn.

      At the NATO summit in Bucharest in early April, membership for Ukraine was supported by U.S. Pres. George W. Bush but opposed by Germany, France, and the United Kingdom. Moreover, Russia warned that Ukrainian entry into NATO would seriously strain relations between the two countries. A second summit in Brussels in December resolved to delay further any talk of Ukrainian membership.

      Apart from the NATO question, relations between Ukraine and Russia grew increasingly tense. The Russian natural-gas monopoly Gazprom demanded that Ukraine repay debts totaling $2 billion for gas imports. After talks between the countries failed, Russia cut off gas supplies to Ukraine on Jan. 1, 2009. In November Medvedev declined an invitation from Yushchenko to attend commemorations of the 75th anniversary of the Holodomor, the 1932–33 famine in which several million Ukrainians died. Russia rejected Ukraine's characterization of the famine as a genocide carried out by Soviet authorities.

      As 2008 drew to a close, the worldwide financial crisis had a devastating impact on Ukraine. In November the economy shrank by more than 14%. The metallurgical industry, which had accounted for almost 30% of GDP, suffered a 50% drop in production that month. In December it was estimated that Ukraine's GDP had increased by just over 2% during the year—a marked slowdown. Unemployment was on the rise, and on December 23, trade unionists demonstrated in Kiev to protest wage cuts and increasing food prices.

      At year's end inflation stood at 22%. Ukraine's central bank had stepped in to try to halt a dramatic decline in the value of the national currency, the hryvnya, whose exchange rate had fallen from around 5 to 7.88 hryvnyas per $1 by late December. The bank spent well over a quarter of its total currency reserves of $37 billion to try to buoy the hryvnya. Much of the initial tranche of a $16.5 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund also was used toward stabilizing the currency. Tymoshenko maintained that members of the president's inner circle, including gas tycoon Dmytro Firtash, had speculated against the hryvnya; she also demanded the resignation of the head of the central bank, Volodymyr Stelmakh, on similar grounds.

David R. Marples

▪ 2008

Area:
603,628 sq km (233,062 sq mi)
Population
(2007 est.): 46,457,000
Capital:
Kiev
Chief of state:
President Viktor Yushchenko
Head of government:
Prime Ministers Viktor Yanukovych and, from December 18, Yuliya Tymoshenko

      In Ukraine the year 2007 was dominated by early parliamentary elections, which were held on September 30. They followed a prolonged dispute between Pres. Viktor Yushchenko and Party of Regions (PR) leader and Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych, with the former accusing the latter of having violated the constitution by persuading individual deputies to switch factions and thereby build a new coalition to usurp power. On April 2 Yushchenko announced that the parliament had been dissolved. In response, the president's opponents maintained that he had no legal grounds to dissolve the assembly. By late March some 15,000 PR supporters had gathered in Kiev to protest. On May 26 the president ordered troops from the Ministry of Internal Affairs into Kiev, only to find the way blocked by troops loyal to Yanukovych. After negotiations between the president and the prime minister, however, both sides accepted the September 30 date and began to prepare for new elections.

 The election was notable for the sweeping gains made by the Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc (BYT), the opposition party led by former prime minister Yuliya Tymoshenko, though the PR maintained its standing as the largest and most popular bloc. Overall the PR won just over 8 million votes, or 34.37% of the total. The BYT finished in second place with 7.16 million votes (30.71%), while the Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense (NUNS) alliance placed third with 3.3 million votes (14.15%). Only two other parties crossed the 3% threshold needed for seats in the assembly: the Communist Party (5.39%) and the (Volodymyr) Lytvyn Bloc (924,538, 3.96%). The Socialist Party, led by Parliament Speaker Oleksandr Moroz, who had parted ways with his former Orange coalition allies in 2006, narrowly failed to make it into the new assembly.

      The BYT and NUNS formed a majority coalition in October. On December 18 Tymoshenko returned to the prime ministership after having gained the 226 votes needed for approval in the 450-member assembly. An initial vote taken a week earlier had shown Tymoshenko one vote short of 226, but President Yushchenko—who had fired her as his prime minister in 2005—resubmitted her name, this time with success by a single vote.

      In the parliamentary elections, the BYT was the only party to secure significant votes in almost all the regions of Ukraine. It won in 16 of Ukraine's 25 regions and in two of its cities, Kiev and Sevastopol. By contrast, the PR was successful in only 10 oblasts, most notably in Luhansk (73.53%) and Donetsk (72.05%), the residence of its main financial backer, Rinat Akhmetov. The PR finished last in Ternopil, with only 20,000 votes (3% of the total), and fared very poorly in all areas of western Ukraine. NUNS, backed by Yushchenko and former internal affairs minister Yury Lutsenko, also had a very disappointing campaign. It won in just one region, Transcarpathia, and even there it held only a narrow lead over the BYT (31.1% to 28.8%).

      According to government figures, GDP in the first 10 months of 2007 rose by 7.3% compared with 2006. Industrial output (January–October) increased by 10.7%, but that of agriculture fell by 5.1%. Consumer price growth rose 11.7% over the same period. In June Ukraine and Russia signed a new protocol on regulations for gas whereby Russia agreed to raise the volume of gas transported through Ukraine by 5 billion cu m in 2008–13 and by 25 billion cu m in 2014–30. In 2007 Ukraine paid $130 per 1,000 cu m of Russian gas, compared with $95 in 2006. On October 9 Ukraine's energy minister, Yury Boyko, signed an agreement with the head of the Russian energy company Gazprom, Aleksey Miller, to clear an outstanding debt of more than $1.3 billion through the return of $1.2 billion in gas owned by RosUkrEnergo to Gazprom Eksport and cash payments by UkrGazEnergo and Naftohaz Ukrainy.

      On September 14 the EU and Ukraine confirmed a closer partnership after a series of fruitful meetings. Though the EU did not accept Ukraine's request for full membership, it had earlier promised $647 million in aid to the country over the next four years. It also lifted visa restrictions, allowing free travel from Ukraine to the EU for those Ukrainians under the age of 18 or of retirement age.

David R. Marples

▪ 2007

Area:
603,628 sq km (233,062 sq mi)
Population
(2006 est.): 46,757,000
Capital:
Kiev
Chief of state:
President Viktor Yushchenko
Head of government:
Prime Ministers Yury Yekhanurov and, from August 4, Viktor Yanukovych

      The year 2006 saw dramatic changes in the political landscape of Ukraine, beginning with the dismissal by the parliament of Prime Minister Yury Yekhanurov's cabinet on January 10 and culminating with a victory in the parliamentary elections by the Party of Regions, led by Viktor Yanukovych, on March 26. The election was contested by 45 political parties, only 5 of which mustered more than the 3% of votes required for the acquisition of seats in the parliament. The Party of Regions received 8.14 million votes (32.14% of the total) for 186 seats, followed by the Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc (22.28%, 129 seats), the Our Ukraine Bloc, representing Pres. Viktor Yushchenko (13.95%, 81 seats), the Socialist Party (5.69%, 33 seats), and the Communist Party (3.66%, 21 seats). The Regions Party mounted an impressive campaign, financed by its members and by regional authorities in southern and eastern Ukraine and led by Yanukovych, who managed to improve an image badly tarnished by his 2004 presidential election contest. The party's support lay primarily in the industrial cities of the east, however. Yuliya Tymoshenko emerged as the most credible of the leaders of the former Orange coalition, which had swept out the old order in 2004, and secured substantial votes in all areas of the country except Donetsk and Luhansk. The results were a serious setback for Yushchenko, whose Our Ukraine Bloc finished first only in three western regions, and the elections signaled the imminent demise of the once-powerful Communist Party. The balloting was widely considered to be the most democratic in the brief history of independent Ukraine and was held out as an indication of the country's political maturity and progress.

 Negotiations for the formation of a ruling coalition were protracted. A proposed new Orange coalition between the Tymoshenko Bloc, Our Ukraine, and the Socialist Party with Tymoshenko as prime minister collapsed when Socialist leader Oleksandr Moroz agreed to become speaker of the parliament and accept Yanukovych as prime minister, a position the latter had held before December 2004. Disagreement within Our Ukraine and the president's position did not allow the formation of a coalition with Tymoshenko as prime minister. On August 3 Yushchenko agreed to nominate Yanukovych to the prime minister's post after the Regions Party and Our Ukraine signed a “universal” declaration of national unity, also subscribed to by the Communist and Socialist parties, in which Yanukovych agreed to be bound by the regime's commitment to join European structures and the World Trade Organization (WTO) and to hold a referendum on joining NATO. The Tymoshenko Bloc refused to sign the universal declaration and went into opposition.

      This coalition lasted barely 11 weeks before Our Ukraine withdrew, though it did not reenter an alliance with the Tymoshenko Bloc. The move was accompanied by the resignation of Yushchenko's allies in the cabinet, leaving the president with only two clear supporters, Foreign Minister Borys Tarasyuk and Defense Minister Anatoly Hrytsenko. The key dilemma for Ukraine was the ambiguity of the revised constitution, particularly whether control of foreign policy was vested in the president or the prime minister. Our Ukraine maintained that the Regions-led parliament had already undermined Ukraine's entry into the WTO (which was strongly opposed by the Communists), and Yanukovych appeared to exceed his powers by announcing during a visit to Brussels that Ukrainian membership in NATO (a move opposed by the Communists and Socialists within the ruling coalition) could be determined only through a national referendum. The complex situation, combined with the election results, caused the authority of the president to be reduced sharply and raised fears of at least a partial return to power of the former ruling elite of the Kuchma years.

      Ukraine temporarily resolved its gas dispute with Russia in early January under an agreement by which Russia's energy company Gazprom agreed to sell gas at a price of $230 per 1,000 cu m to RosUkrEnergo, a joint-venture company, which in turn would sell the gas to Ukraine for $95 per 1,000 cu m. Ukraine's GDP rose by 6.2% in the months January–September over the same period in 2005, bolstered by a good performance in all economic sectors, with the notable exception of agriculture, which fell by 2.3%.

David R. Marples

▪ 2006

Area:
603,628 sq km (233,062 sq mi)
Population
(2005 est.): 47,075,000
Capital:
Kiev
Chief of state:
Presidents Leonid Kuchma and, from January 23, Viktor Yushchenko
Head of government:
Prime Ministers Viktor Yanukovich, Mykola Azarov (acting) from January 5, Yuliya Tymoshenko from January 24 (acting to February 4), and, from September 8 (acting to September 22), Yury Yekhanurov

      The year 2005 in Ukraine was dominated by the tribulations of the new government headed by Pres. Viktor Yushchenko (Yushchenko, Viktor ) (see Biographies), who was inaugurated on January 23. His cabinet comprised 15 members of his Our Ukraine Party, 3 Socialist Party members, and a member each from the Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc and the Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs. Tymoshenko, a key figure in the Orange Revolution, was appointed prime minister on February 4, with the unanimous endorsement of the parliament.

 Yushchenko came to office with promises that Ukraine would take immediate steps to join Euro-Atlantic structures, particularly the EU and NATO. As a result, he attended a NATO commission meeting in Brussels in March and in April had a four-day state visit to the United States, where he delivered an address to a joint session of the U.S. Congress. He also tried to mend the ruptured relationship with Russian Pres. Vladimir Putin, visiting Moscow in January and for the May celebrations of the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe.

      The new government soon ran into serious problems over several key issues, including personality conflicts and mutual accusations of continuing corruption among cabinet ministers; a fuel crisis, which materialized in May and was accompanied by a 15% rise in oil prices, leading the president to accuse his cabinet of incompetence; and an apparent failure to deal with the irregular practices of the regime of former president Leonid Kuchma, notably the reprivatization of companies undersold to favoured oligarchs, including the giant Kryvyy Rih steelworks, and the unsolved 2000 murder of opposition journalist Georgy Gongadze.

      On March 1 Yushchenko confirmed that the journalist had been murdered by Ukrainian police officers, and two suspects were arrested. Tapes released by Kuchma's former bodyguard, however, clearly implicated the involvement of government officials. On March 4, shortly before he was scheduled for interrogation, former internal affairs minister Yury Kravchenko was discovered dead in his home. Thereafter, the investigation appeared stalled.

      In the eyes of some critics, the Yushchenko administration was viewed as insufficiently different from its predecessor. At a July press conference, the president angrily dealt with a reporter's questions about the lavish lifestyle of his son by accusing the speaker, Serhy Leshchenko, of acting “like a hired killer.” In a similar fashion the president and several ministers defended the credentials of Justice Minister Roman Zvarych, whom the Internet newspaper Ukrainska Pravda accused of padding his résumé with an unearned doctorate and law degree.

      The Ukrainian economy slowed down sharply compared with recent years. GDP rose by 4.7% in the first five months of the year, and the anticipated annual rate was likely to be lower than the official prognosis of 8.2%. The slowdown was accompanied by rising inflation and sluggish rates of privatization as a result of the crisis over the Kryvyy Rih steelworks—an issue that remained unresolved until that company's sale in October to the Rotterdam, Neth.-based Mittal Steel Co. for $4.8 billion.

      Nevertheless, there was general surprise when Yushchenko dismissed his entire cabinet on September 8, including Prime Minister Tymoshenko and Petro Poroshenko, secretary of the National Security and Defense Council. Chief of Staff Oleksandr Zinchenko also resigned. Over the next two weeks, Yushchenko reached an agreement with Viktor Yanukovich, his former adversary for the presidential post, in order to secure the approval of a new prime minister, Yury Yekhanurov, a Siberian-born resident of Dnipropetrovsk. At the same time, the president granted an amnesty to election officials accused of having manipulated the December 2004 vote.

      The new cabinet had eight new faces, as well as a new portfolio—the Ministry for Construction and Architecture. Key appointees were Anatoly Kinakh in the National Security and Defense Council, Arseny Yatsenyuk as minister of the economy, and Serhy Holovaty (appointed in October) as minister of justice. The restructured government faced a period of preparation for the 2006 parliamentary elections, when Yushchenko would likely face opposition from Tymoshenko, his former ally. Though constitutional reforms that were to take effect in January 2006 would provide the new prime minister with enhanced powers vis-à-vis the president, Our Ukraine currently had the support of only about 20% of MPs; Regions of Ukraine (Yanukovich) and the Tymoshenko Bloc had similar standings.

      Further political conflict in Ukraine appeared inevitable, and with an economic slowdown and little progress made on EU membership, the road ahead for the Orange government appeared rocky.

David R. Marples

▪ 2005

Area:
603,628 sq km (233,062 sq mi)
Population
(2004 est.): 47,470,000
Capital:
Kiev
Chief of state:
President Leonid Kuchma
Head of government:
Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich

      The year 2004 in Ukraine ended in political turmoil in connection with the presidential elections that took place in late October through December. In late 2003 a bill to change the constitution to give more authority to the parliament over the president had been initiated by Pres. Leonid Kuchma's chief of staff, Viktor Medvedchuk, and Communist Party leader Petro Symonenko. The bill anticipated the election of the president directly by the parliament. On March 5, 2004, the parliament accepted a first draft of a law that would introduce a system of proportional representation for parliamentary elections, but on April 8 the draft constitutional reform bill fell just short of the required 300 votes.

      The Constitutional Court also paved the way for a possible third term for President Kuchma by dating his presidency from the entry into force of the constitution in 1996. By mid-April, however, Kuchma's supporters in the parliament had agreed to nominate Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich, a former Donetsk governor, as their presidential candidate, clearly with the president's backing. Our Ukraine leader Viktor Yushchenko emerged as the chief opposition candidate, backed by Yuliya Tymoshenko, leader of the Tymoshenko bloc.

      Spring and summer saw an apparent victory for Our Ukraine candidate Viktor Baloha in the election for mayor in the city of Mukachiv in Transcarpathia overturned in favour of Ernest Nuser, who was supported by Medvedchuk and the United Social Democratic Party, and the use of skinhead thugs to attack Our Ukraine supporters. A government inquiry later overturned Nuser's “victory.” In June, Investment-Metallurgical Union, the company of the president's son-in-law, was allowed to purchase Kryvorizhstal, the country's largest steel producer, at a price of about $800 million, believed to be less than one-fifth of the market value.

      The election campaign saw impediments put in the way of Yushchenko, including physical prevention from campaigning in Donetsk and other eastern cities. In early September Yushchenko had to interrupt his campaign after he became ill with what was termed “acute poisoning.” The illness became a campaign issue as Yushchenko's face became disfigured and pockmarked. Russia took a partisan stance during the campaign. Yanukovich was invited to Moscow to celebrate Pres. Vladimir Putin's birthday on October 7, and Putin made two visits to Kiev during the elections.

      Twenty-four candidates ran in the first round on October 31. The Central Election Commission (CEC) initially put Yanukovich slightly ahead of Yushchenko, 39.88% to 39.22%. Ten days later, when counting was recommenced, however, Yushchenko's portion rose to 39.87% and Yanukovich's fell to 39.32%. The runoff round saw Yanukovich and Yushchenko in a direct contest. Though exit polls suggested that the opposition leader led by about nine points, the CEC announced that Yanukovich had won, with 49.42% compared with Yushchenko's 46.7%. These results were recognized by Russia and Belarus but not by the EU or the U.S.

      Yushchenko's supporters maintained that the results were fabricated, and mass protests began in Kiev's Independence Square on November 22. Tymoshenko called for a nationwide strike. The protesters pitched tents along Kreshchatyk, the main street, and blocked entrances to government buildings. Several provinces, particularly in western Ukraine, recognized Yushchenko as the winner, and the candidate was sworn in as president in an informal session of the parliament. Gradually the television stations formerly controlled by Kuchma, as well as security and military leaders, switched support to the Yushchenko campaign. Meanwhile, in Severodonetsk a meeting of leaders of eastern Ukrainian regions recognized Yanukovich as president and postulated a referendum on whether these regions should become autonomous and eventually secede from Ukraine and join Russia.

      The impasse continued for two weeks. On December 3 the Supreme Court declared the election results to be invalid and ordered a rerun of the second round. For their part the Yushchenko supporters agreed to recognize the main points of the constitutional reform bill that would limit the powers of the president, reform local government, and elect the parliament by proportional representation. The CEC was replaced and an agreement made that the rerun would be monitored closely by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.

      Tensions rose again on December 12 when doctors in Vienna confirmed that Yushchenko's blood contained levels of dioxin that were more than 1,000 times the norm and concluded that he had been poisoned at the early stages of the election campaign.

      On December 26 the runoff election was held, and preliminary results revealed Yushchenko as the winner. Yanukovich, however, legally challenged the results, and the matter was not expected to be resolved until early 2005.

David R. Marples

▪ 2004

Area:
603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi)
Population
(2003 est.): 47,856,000
Capital:
Kiev
Chief of state:
President Leonid Kuchma
Head of government:
Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich

      Ukraine was dominated in 2003 by two issues: relations with Russia and the proposals to make constitutional changes to the way the parliament and president were elected. On January 28 Pres. Leonid Kuchma and Russian Pres. Vladimir Putin signed a number of bilateral documents, including one on border issues. Proposals to establish a “joint economic space” with Russia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan were accepted in principle by the parliament in May and signed by the leaders of the four countries in Yalta on September 19. Relations with Russia suddenly deteriorated in October following Russia's commencement of construction on a dam between the Taman Peninsula (on Russian soil) and Tuzla Island on the Kerch Strait of Crimea. Ostensibly Russia wished to lay claims to the area between the Kerch Strait and the Sea of Azov and to redraw existing borders. On October 16 Ukraine sent border guards to halt construction, and the parliament issued a resolution to end the threat to Ukrainian “territorial integrity.” The prime ministers of the two countries met on October 24 and agreed that Ukraine would remove its border guards and Russia would stop construction of the dam pending further discussions.

      Ukraine's attitude toward the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq was ambivalent. It agreed to send a chemical defense battalion to Kuwait at the request of the U.S., but the legislature condemned the attack on Iraq by a vote of 229 to 5. Earlier claims that Ukraine was supplying radar systems to the Iraqis were quietly dropped.

      At home the Kuchma regime encountered increasingly strong opposition from the Our Ukraine faction in the Supreme Council, led by former prime minister Viktor Yushchenko. In late February Yushchenko demanded an end to political terror and murders in the country, and an antipresidential rally of some 50,000 people followed on March 9. At a forum of democratic forces later in the month in Kiev, Yushchenko anticipated that his bloc would form a new political party with a broad base, one that was in alliance with the Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc. The authorities blocked another Our Ukraine forum in November in Donetsk.

      Behind the conflict lay the prospect of the 2004 presidential election and the president's proposals to change the political system. In March Kuchma suggested that the president should have the power to dissolve the parliament should it fail to acquire a working majority. He also indicated that the parliament should be elected according to a party list for a five-year term and that there should be an upper and a lower assembly.

      Kuchma's proposals encountered bitter resistance, and he was forced to back off. The opposition supported elections according to a system of proportional representation and the election of the president directly by the parliament, although the 2004 election would still be held by direct ballot, and requiring a two-thirds majority of parliamentary deputies for ratification. In October deputies from the Socialist Party (Oleksander Moroz), the Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc, and Our Ukraine prevented access to the rostrum of the Supreme Council and demanded that a vote be held at once on the question of a system of full proportional representation. In December the Constitutional Court ruled that the parliament could legally elect the president in 2004 and that Kuchma could be a candidate in that election, as his first term had begun before the enactment of the constitution.

      The economy continued to improve. GDP rose by 4.1% in 2002 and was projected to increase by 5–6% in 2003. Meanwhile, a government economic plan foresaw a rise in the monthly wage to reach 342 hryvnyas (about $65) by 2007. From Jan. 1, 2004, Ukrainian residents would pay a flat tax of 13%, which was expected to boost the consumer market.

      Not all sectors of society were satisfied with the economic situation, however. Coal miners went on strike in March for higher wages. The 2003 harvest was anticipated to be so poor that the government imposed food price hikes, which led to protests outside the parliament in early July. The government reacted furiously, dismissing the head of the State Food Department and numerous other officials. Up to seven million Ukrainians were reportedly working abroad because of the difficult situation within the country.

      Two important anniversaries received very different commemoration in 2003. The 60th anniversary of the “Volyn massacre” of Poles by Ukrainian insurgents in 1943 was combined with acknowledgement of the repression of Ukrainians by Poles during postwar resettlement. The 70th anniversary of the Ukrainian famine (known in Ukraine as the Holodomor) resulted in a resolution by the Supreme Council on May 15 that stated that the famine had been “an act of genocide” and political terrorism carried out by the Stalinist regime against the people of Ukraine. Ukrainian historians estimated that the famine cost the country between five million and seven million lives.

David R. Marples

▪ 2003

Area:
603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi)
Population
(2002 est.): 48,120,000
Capital:
Kiev
Chief of state:
President Leonid Kuchma
Head of government:
Prime Ministers Anatoly Kinakh and, from November 21, Viktor Yanukovich

      The year 2002 in Ukraine was notable for a political impasse that followed the parliamentary election of March 31. Voting took part in two stages: the election of 225 deputies based on party lists by proportional representation and the election of a further 225 in one-seat constituencies. In the former, Our Ukraine, a democratic coalition led by former prime minister Viktor Yushchenko, won 23.6% of the vote (70 seats), the Communists 20% (59 seats), and For a United Ukraine, the party endorsed by Pres. Leonid Kuchma, 11.8% (36 seats). Three other parties received more than 6% of the vote: the Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc, the Socialist Party, and the Social Democratic Party.

      In single-mandate constituencies, however, For a United Ukraine, bolstered by the official media, won 66 seats, and 18 independent deputies were persuaded to join its ranks. Our Ukraine won 42 seats, the Communists 7, and the Social Democratic Party 5. Ultimately then, For a United Ukraine had 119 deputies and Our Ukraine 113, with 66 Communist deputies, 23 for the Tymoshenko Bloc, and 23 for the Socialists. The U.S. criticized the conduct of the elections and the favouritism shown to pro-government parties through the use of official facilities and the media.

      Four blocs—Our Ukraine, Tymoshenko, the Socialist, and Communist parties—protested what they saw as the government's manipulation of the election results and the use of bribery and intimidation by the government during the election. Volodymyr Lytvyn, leader of For a United Ukraine, maintained that his party had won the election. The outcome initially was the virtual equal division of the new legislature into two blocs: pro-government and the opposition.

      The opposition grew even more incensed at the election of Lytvyn as speaker and two other pro-Kuchma candidates—Hennady Vasilyev (For a United Ukraine) and Oleksandr Zinchenko (Social Democratic Party)—as his deputies. Also controversial was the president's appointment in mid-June of well-known oligarch Viktor Medvedchuk as the new head of the presidential administration.

      The opposition staged major antigovernment demonstrations on September 16 and 24, but Kuchma made it clear to opposition leaders that he planned to step down as president in 2004. On October 8 Lytvyn announced a majority bloc of pro-government deputies in the legislature (231 members), but demonstrations continued on October 12 and 19. The opposition put forward a motion to impeach the president should he refuse to step down.

      Revelations from the incident in which tapes made in 2000 by former presidential bodyguard Mykola Melnychenko allegedly caught President Kuchma agreeing to the elimination of Georgy Gongadze, a dissident journalist, continued to have repercussions in 2002. On September 14 the prosecutor general declared that Gongadze's murder was politically motivated and that an investigation would be carried out together with international experts. In the spring the parliamentary commission investigating the tapes declared that it had uncovered a conversation between Kuchma and the head of a state arms-exporting company in which the president agreed to sell $100 million worth of weapons to Iraq in contravention of the 1990 UN Security Council resolution banning such sales. Accusations broadened in April to include Kuchma's alleged approval of the sale to Iraq of Kolchuga radar systems (which could detect stealth bombers). The Ukrainian government denied these allegations.

      Ukraine continued to show impressive economic growth. Industrial output was reportedly up by 14.2% in 2001, and gross domestic product grew by 4.1% in 2002. On the other hand, a government report of August indicated that some 13 million people (about 27%) were living below an official poverty line of $33 per month. This poverty was particularly acute in the western region of Transcarpathia and in Crimea, where the Tatar population had resettled in large numbers in recent years.

      The year was marked by industrial and military accidents, especially in the Donets Basin coal mines, perhaps the most dangerous workplace in the world. World attention also focused on Ukraine following a disaster at the Lviv air show on July 27, when a fighter jet crashed shortly after takeoff, killing 76 people and injuring more than 100. (See Disasters.)

David R. Marples

▪ 2002

Area:
603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi)
Population
(2001 est.): 48,767,000
Capital:
Kiev
Chief of state:
President Leonid Kuchma
Head of government:
Prime Ministers Viktor Yushchenko and, from May 29, Anatoly Kinakh

      Ukraine in 2001 was marked by high-level political conflict and a notable improvement in economic performance but continuing social problems. On January 19 Pres. Leonid Kuchma dismissed Yuliya Tymoshenko, a deputy premier for the energy and fuel sector. Tymoshenko, a former colleague of disgraced former prime minister Pavlo Lazarenko, was arrested a month later and accused of having passed a bribe to Lazarenko. She was released on March 27, however, after a district court in Kiev annulled the original arrest warrant. Tymoshenko was widely regarded as a possible presidential contender when Kuchma's second term expired in 2004.

      The president continued to face political fallout from the disappearance in September 2000 of dissident journalist Georgy Gongadze—who had been investigating Lazarenko—and from recordings that allegedly had captured Kuchma's voice sanctioning Gongadze's elimination. The tapes had been taken out of the country by a former presidential bodyguard and later made public. On January 10 officials stated that a headless corpse found outside Kiev in November 2000 was most likely that of the missing journalist. A protest movement arose, and tents pitched by activists on Kiev's main street had to be forcibly removed by the militia on March 1. The largest demonstration, on March 9—part of a new movement called Ukraine Without Kuchma—led to fierce clashes between demonstrators and the police close to the presidential administration building. By the summer the protests appeared to have died down somewhat. Several officials were dismissed in the aftermath of the Gongadze scandal, including Leonid Derkach, head of the Security Service, and Interior Minister Yury Kravchenko. In mid-April the U.S. granted political asylum to the bodyguard as well as to Gongadze's widow and two children.

      The political turmoil continued when, on April 26, the parliament passed a vote of no-confidence in Prime Minister Viktor Yushchenko, probably the most pro-Western figure in Kuchma's cabinet. The parliamentary resolution, which was proposed by the Communist faction and passed 263–69, also accused the cabinet of having failed to ameliorate the economic situation. Yushchenko was replaced by Anatoly Kinakh, who subsequently formed an electoral bloc called Our Ukraine to contest the 2002 parliamentary elections. It remained unclear whether this bloc was opposed to the continuation of the Kuchma presidency.

      Economic performance in Ukraine improved in the first half of 2001. Gross domestic product rose by 9% during 2001, following a growth figure of 6% for the year 2000. According to Prime Minister Kinakh, wages increased by almost 17% between January and July, and real income rose by 8.5%. Inflation remained at about 6% and although the state debt had fallen, it continued to exceed the 50 billion hryvnia (about $9.4 billion) mark. The improved economic performance might be linked to the expansion of Russian business enterprises into Ukraine, but it had not yet offset the general decline in living standards that had characterized the independence period. By mid-August Ukraine had already surpassed its grain production target of 35 million metric tons for the 2001 harvest, which also added to the improved performance over the agricultural sector in the year 2000.

      In early February Ukraine dismantled its last Tu-160 strategic bomber at a base near Kiev. The government accepted responsibility for the accidental downing of a Russian commercial airliner by a stray missile on October 4. The plane was flying from Israel to Russia but was hit while flying over the Black Sea. Defense Minister Oleksandr Kuzmuk resigned three weeks later over the incident, and he was replaced by Chief of Staff Volodymyr Shkidchenko on a temporary basis.

      Pope John Paul II visited Ukraine in the summer and, in beatification ceremonies in the city of Lviv, paid tribute to some 27 Greek Catholic priests who were victims of the Soviet secret police in the early postwar years. The pontiff also tried to reconcile the Orthodox and Catholic factions in Ukraine. In the social sphere, Médicins sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) sponsored an AIDS-awareness campaign in March on the heels of an announcement that over 250,000 Ukrainians were HIV-positive, the highest rate per capita in the countries of the former U.S.S.R.

David R. Marples

▪ 2001

Area:
603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi)
Population
(2000 est.): 49,242,000
Capital:
Kiev
Chief of state:
President Leonid Kuchma
Head of government:
Prime Minister Viktor Yushchenko

      The year 2000 began in Ukraine with a parliamentary crisis. A pro-government right-centrist majority was formed under the leadership of former president Leonid Kravchuk (United Social Democratic Party) and attempted to remove Speaker Oleksandr Tkachenko and his deputy, Adam Martynyuk. The move failed on January 21 but led to a separate session by the leftist legislators. On February 1 the new coalition chose Ivan Plyushch as speaker of the Supreme Council by a vote of 255–1. A week later the majority took over the parliament building by force, evicting Tkachenko and the leftist faction. In September Oleksandr Karpov of the Popular Democratic Party replaced Kravchuk as the leader of the right-centrist majority, but by that time the number of deputies committed to the faction had declined to 171.

      The Ukrainian government announced in mid-January its intention to hold a nationwide referendum on six propositions: the introduction of a no-confidence vote in the Supreme Council; the adoption of the constitution by referendum; the right of the president to dissolve the Supreme Council if no majority was formed within one month or if it failed to adopt a new budget within three months; the reduction of the number of deputies from 450 to 300; the formation of a second, upper, house; and the abolition of deputies' immunity from prosecution. President Kuchma subsequently accepted a decision by the Constitutional Court that declared the first two items to be unconstitutional. Despite protests from the Council of Europe, the controversial referendum was held on April 16. About 81% of the eligible voters went to the polls, and the remaining four propositions were approved by between 81% and 90% of the electorate.

      In late September Kuchma dismissed Foreign Minister Borys Tarasyuk, reportedly for his failure to increase Ukrainian trade in Europe and for the lack of progress toward Ukraine's integration into European structures and associate European Union membership. Tarasyuk's successor was a former foreign minister, Anatoly Zlenko.

      Ukraine's economy improved somewhat. Gross domestic product rose by 5% in the first half of the year, and industrial output (the prime factor in GDP rise) was reportedly up 11.7% in the period January–July as compared with 1999. Inflation, however, remained uncomfortably high at 25–29%, and Ukraine still owed about $2.2 billion to the International Monetary Fund. That organization admonished Ukraine's national bank for having overstated its hard currency reserves in 1997 and 1998 in order to obtain about $200 million in loans. The coal industry remained in a desperate state, and 40,000 miners went on strike in May to protest arrears in wages of almost 750 million hryvny (about $140 million) and the low rate of payment compared with other sectors of the economy. Prime Minister Viktor Yushchenko announced a Reforms for Prosperity program that anticipated an average GDP rise of 6.5% in the period 2002–04.

      In June, following U.S. Pres. Bill Clinton's visit to Kiev, President Kuchma announced that the controversial Chernobyl nuclear power station would be closed by Dec. 15, 2000. The country remained desperately short of energy, however, and much time and effort were spent wrangling with Russia over the size of Ukraine's oil and gas debts.

      Relations with Russia continued to be difficult. Early in the year, Russia complained about the deteriorating conditions concerning the use of the Russian language by the large Russian minority living in Ukraine. In May several Russians attacked and killed Ukrainian composer Ihor Bilozir in Lviv, allegedly for singing Ukrainian songs in a café. On May 30 some 3,000 protesters marched through the city chanting, “Down with the Russians!”

      The demographic and health situations also remained grim. Ukraine's population fell further, from an estimated 49,890,000 in 1999 to some 49,242,000 in mid-2000. In August a mass poisoning occurred in Mykolayiv province, evidently the result of waste from a military facility being dumped into the soil. Several villages were evacuated after 331 people were hospitalized.

David R. Marples

▪ 2000

Area:
603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi)
Population
(1999 est.): 49,890,000
Capital:
Kiev
Chief of state:
President Leonid Kuchma
Head of government:
Prime Ministers Valery Pustovoytenko and, from December 22, Viktor Yushchenko

      The year 1999 proved to be a significant one for Ukraine, with a divisive presidential election, the death of a charismatic opposition leader, and the flight abroad of a former prime minister. The major event of the year was the presidential elections of October 31 and November 14. In the first round, 13 candidates ran for election, but only 4 received more than 10% of the vote: incumbent Pres. Leonid Kuchma (36.49%), Communist Party leader Petro Symonenko (22.24%), Socialist Party leader Oleksandr Moroz (11.2%), and Progressive Socialist Nataliya Vitrenko (10.97%). In the bitterly contested runoff, Kuchma defeated Symonenko, winning 56.31% to 37.76%. Kuchma received his highest support in western and central Ukraine, whereas Symonenko led in eastern Ukraine. Some observers maintained that the elections did not meet democratic standards, particularly in view of the tight government control over the media.

      The Ukrainian Popular Movement (Rukh), the formerly prominent opposition party, was officially divided in mid-February. Vyacheslav Chornovil was removed as leader for allegedly having taken actions without consultation with the membership. Rukh split into two branches, with the new faction led by Yury Kostenko. On March 25 Chornovil was killed in a car crash near Kiev, and a week later former foreign minister Hennady Udovenko took over his section of Rukh. Both Kostenko and Udovenko participated in the presidential elections, but they received a combined total of only 3.4%.

      Meanwhile, former prime minister and prominent businessman Pavlo Lazarenko was detained at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York on February 19 while seeking entry into the United States on an invalid visa; he applied for asylum in the United States. The Ukrainian prosecutor general had issued a warrant for his arrest after the Supreme Council stripped him of parliamentary immunity earlier in the month.

      Ukraine's possible associate membership in the European Union was discussed in July, but little progress was made. A major problem was the continuing operation of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Earlier that same month German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder visited Kiev and announced that his government had postponed a decision on the financing of two new reactors at the Khmelnytsky and Rivne stations. Ukraine protested that this delay was in violation of the 1995 agreement signed by the Group of Seven countries with Ukraine. In late August the state Energoatom agency announced that Ukraine was likely to miss the 2000 deadline for the closure of Chernobyl (agreed to at the same meeting) because of the urgent need for electricity during the coming winter. Ukraine's membership in the Council of Europe was also suspended because of its poor human rights record. The Council had long demanded that Ukraine abolish the death penalty.

      The country's economy continued to struggle. On May 1 the foreign debt totaled $12.4 billion (half of which was owed to the International Monetary Fund, Russia, and the World Bank). In mid-October it was reported that Ukraine's gross domestic product had shrunk by 1.7% compared with the same period in 1998, while over the same period the government had managed to repay only 5% of its $524 million pension and wage arrears. As a result, more than half of Ukrainian coal mines ceased deliveries on October 1, and mine workers began a seven-day protest to demand the payment of wage arrears. The miners' actions echoed those of nuclear plant workers earlier in the year. The hryvnia, Ukraine's currency, dipped to an all-time low of 5.1 to the dollar in early November, though it recovered somewhat after the reelection of Kuchma.

      Ukraine continued to be a magnet for illegal immigrants, many from Asian countries en route to Central and Western Europe. According to the State Border Guards Committee, there were about 60,000 illegal immigrants in Ukraine in July. Paradoxically, the population continued to decline at an alarming rate. The State Statistics Committee reported in July that the population had fallen from 52,040,000 at the end of 1991 to 49,890,000 on July 1, 1999. The decline was a consequence of declining birthrates, a higher death rate, and a relatively high rate of infant mortality.

David R. Marples

▪ 1999

      Area: 603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi)

      Population (1998 est.): 50,302,000

      Capital: Kiev

      Chief of state: President Leonid Danylovych Kuchma

      Head of government: Prime Minister Valery Pustovoytenko

      The year 1998 was a particularly difficult one for Ukraine, which suffered from the financial crisis in Russia and also proved unable to overcome a political impasse between the government and the legislature. On March 29 Ukraine held parliamentary elections. Almost a quarter of the electorate voted for the Communist Party (24.68%), with the Ukrainian Popular Movement (Rukh) a distant second at 9.4%. Left-wing parties (Communists, the Socialist/Agrarian coalition, and Progressive Socialists) won 180 of the 450 seats. Electing a chairman of the parliament proved a protracted affair. After 19 attempts, Oleksandr Tkachenko of the Peasants' Party of Ukraine was voted into office with the support of 232 deputies (six more than the minimum required).

      From the perspective of Pres. Leonid Kuchma and his administration, the new parliament proved as difficult to work with as had been its predecessor. In October Prime Minister Valery Pustovoytenko survived a no-confidence vote (203-108) as the Left faction continued to criticize what it perceived as the government's excessive dependence on the International Monetary Fund and compliance with IMF "dictates."

      Politics in Ukraine during the year were oriented toward the presidential elections of 1999. According to a poll in November, former parliamentary chairman and leader of the Socialist Party Oleksandr Moroz was the leading candidate, with 20% of the vote. He was followed by Communist Party leader Petro Symonenko at 18%, with President Kuchma (a declared candidate) trailing well behind with only 11%.

      Kuchma and his government were blamed for Ukraine's continuing economic ills and increasing corruption. Gross domestic product (GDP) fell by 3.2% in 1997. The first nine months of 1998 appeared to herald an improvement, however, as GDP rose by 0.2% compared with the same period in 1997, industrial output was up by 0.3%, and production of consumer goods increased 4.1%. With inflation at a low 2.3%, Ukraine seemed to have achieved a breakthrough in halting an economic decline that had begun in 1991. In the wake of the financial collapse in Russia, however, this rejuvenation proved to be illusory. In September there were large declines in the output of steel (a fall of 22% compared with September 1997) and metalworking products. End-of-year figures indicated that industrial output fell 1.5% in 1998.

      The Ukrainian government made little progress in the fight against corruption. On April 28 the president signed an edict that anticipated taking this battle into the parliament and courts by stripping immunity from parliamentary deputies and judges. This move followed the assassination of Vadym Hetman, chairman of Ukraine's Interbank Currency Exchange and the leader of the Group of Independent Deputies in the parliament. In September Berlin-based Transparency International, whose mission was to oppose corruption in international business, conducted a detailed survey of 85 countries to adjudge the degree of corruption in each one. Of the 85, Ukraine tied for 69th. Corruption reached the highest levels of the administration and was believed to have played a major part in the gradual leftward political shift on the part of much of the population, which equated corruption with privatization and market forces.

      Ukraine's industry continued to struggle with current and past problems. On April 4 a methane gas explosion at the Skochinsky coal mine in Donetsk resulted in 63 fatalities and 71 injuries. The mine had long been known to be dangerous, but adequate maintenance had been ignored because of the shortage of funds.

      As Ukraine restarted its third reactor at the Chernobyl station on May 16, the effects of the 1986 accident there continued to be reported. Health Minister Andriy Serdyuk stated on April 22 that more than 12,500 of those who were involved in the cleanup campaign had died from radiation sickness, and many of the 350,000 who took part in decontamination and repair work at the plant were suffering from thyroid cancer, leukemia, and other ailments. Those figures were not supported by all sources, however, and there was some speculation that they were related to requests for additional aid for the nation's nuclear power industry. Though Ukraine continued to work with the Group of Seven industrial countries, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and other agencies for the development of new reactors at the Rivne and Khmelnytskyy stations (the total cost was said to be about $1.6 billion), it recently turned to Russia to help finance the new plants, frustrated at delays in funding from the West.

      In foreign affairs Ukraine moved closer to Russia but continued to maintain good relations with the United States and Europe. On January 14 the Ukrainian parliament ratified the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation, and Partnership with Russia that had been signed in May 1997. In February President Kuchma traveled to Moscow, where he assured Russia that Ukraine had no intention of joining NATO. Kuchma and Russian Pres. Boris Yeltsin signed an agreement on economic cooperation for the period 1998-2007. On September 18-19, following the Russian crisis, Yeltsin and Kuchma met in Moscow and agreed to a joint approach to financial problems and to a free-trade zone between the two countries.

DAVID R. MARPLES

▪ 1998

      Area: 603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi)

      Population (1997 est.): 50,668,000

      Capital: Kiev

      Chief of state: President Leonid Kuchma

      Head of government: Prime Ministers Pavlo Lazarenko until July 2 and, from July 16, Valery Pustovoytenko

      The year 1997 proved a complex one for Ukraine, with continuing tensions between president and parliament and between president and prime minister. In July, shortly after leading a trade delegation on a much-publicized visit to Canada, Prime Minister Pavlo Lazarenko formally resigned and was replaced two weeks later by Valery Pustovoytenko, formerly the mayor of Dnipropetrovsk. Lazarenko had been criticized publicly by Pres. Leonid Kuchma for his failure to deal with corruption—and even possibly being a part of it himself. Pustovoytenko inherited the Clean Hands program, initiated by Kuchma in mid-February to root out government corruption. These efforts were denounced by Serhy Holovaty, the reform-minded minister of justice, who also lost his position in August.

      The political arena remained volatile, notably because the parliament was chaired by Socialist Party chief Oleksandr Moroz, who was often at odds with President Kuchma. The 1997 budget, for example, was not passed until June. Kuchma was clearly unhappy with the most significant legislation of the year, a new law on parliamentary elections that divided the 450-seat legislature into two 225-seat parts for the elections scheduled for March 29, 1998; half the deputies were to be elected in single-mandate territorial districts, the other half from slates of parties or blocs. It took 13 tries to get the bill through the parliament before it was accepted on September 24 by a bare majority and reluctantly signed by the president on October 22. The election law and the process it went through were hailed by some as evidence that Ukraine maintained—by post-Soviet standards—a relatively strong legislature.

      The rifts among political leadership focused attention on the parliamentary elections in 1998 and the presidential elections in 1999. Four candidates had already announced their intention to seek the presidency: Kuchma; Lazarenko, now the government leader of Dnipropetrovsk region; former prime minister and police chief Yevhen Marchuk; and Holovaty.

      Despite optimistic official statements and generous aid from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Ukraine continued to struggle economically. During the first nine months of the year, gross domestic product fell by 5% compared with the same period in 1996, which indicated that the economic decline had not yet "bottomed out." By November failure to pay debts had resulted in the impounding of Ukrainian ships at some foreign ports.

      Kuchma convoked the Supreme Economic Council on September 12 to hammer out a socioeconomic policy to the year 2000. It was anticipated that some of the $2.4 billion backlog of wages owed to government workers and $3.7 billion due to the pension fund would be met by the year's end. Unemployment continued to rise and reached 516,358 by April.

      Foreign investment, on the other hand, led by companies in the U.S. and Germany, rose by a healthy 46.1% in the first half of the year (over the 1996 figure). The IMF and President Kuchma alike stressed the importance for the future of establishing small and medium-sized private businesses, which had yet to receive adequate incentives from the parliament.

      In July, Minister of Health Andriy Serdyuk announced that over the past six years, life expectancy among males had fallen from 64.7 to 61.2 years and that the population overall had fallen by 1,150,000 to 50,900,000 by Jan. 1, 1997. For the past few years, the mortality rate had exceeded the birthrate, apparently linked to the continuing drop in living standards. Crime rates remained high; Borys Derevyanko, the editor in chief of the main independent newspaper in Odessa, was assassinated on August 11.

      In the international sphere an accord was reached with Russia on May 28 on the long-disputed question of the disposition of the Black Sea Fleet. Russia was given about 80% of the fleet and use of two of the main Black Sea ports, Sevastopol and South Bay. Ukraine received the more distant Striletskaya Bay and $526 million in compensation for the loss of ships. Russia agreed to lease facilities at Sevastopol for $100 million a year for 20 years, with the payments marked off against Ukraine's existing $3 billion debt to Russia. This accord cleared the way for the 10-year political treaty signed three days later by which, among other provisions, Russia recognized the political and territorial integrity of Ukraine, including the Crimean Peninsula. Though partly symbolic, the treaty stabilized relations with Russia for the first time since Ukraine declared independence in August 1991. Another round of bilateral talks in Kiev and Moscow in November led to the resolution of a trade dispute between the two countries, and both agreed to abolish the 20% value-added tax that they had been imposing on imports from the other country.

      In mid-July the Kiev-based Social Monitoring Centre announced the results of a poll, based on more than 2,000 respondents from all regions, that indicated that 44% of Ukrainians supported the idea of joining the Russia-Belarus union (announced on April 2, 1997), 32% were opposed, and 24% were undecided.

      Relations with the West, and particularly the U.S., remained cordial. Foreign Affairs Minister Hennady Udovenko visited Washington, D.C., in March and had discussions on NATO expansion with Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. .) (Albright, Madeleine ) On July 9 Kuchma and the leaders of the 16 NATO countries signed a charter on a "Distinctive Partnership Between NATO and Ukraine," which provided for regular consultations and cooperation on a number of issues but did not go as far as the Ukrainians wished—namely, to provide a NATO guarantee of the security of Ukraine and military status within NATO. A similar document was signed by Russia and the NATO states at the same time.

      In September, by acclamation, Udovenko was elected president of the 52nd session of the United Nations General Assembly.

DAVID R. MARPLES

▪ 1997

      A republic in eastern Europe, Ukraine borders Russia to the north and east, the Black Sea to the south, Romania and Moldova to the southwest, and Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland to the west. Area: 603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi). Pop. (1996 est.): 51,273,000. Cap.: Kiev. Monetary unit: hryvnia (a new currency introduced Sept. 2, 1996, to replace the karbovanets at a rate of 1 hryvnia = 100,000 karbovantsy; on September 16 the hryvnia became sole legal tender), with (Oct. 11, 1996) a free rate of 1.77 hryvny to U.S. $1 (2.78 hryvny = £1 sterling). President in 1996, Leonid Kuchma; prime ministers, Yevhen Marchuk and, from May 27, Pavlo Lazarenko.

      In 1996 Ukraine marked its fifth year of independence as one of the most stable of the states created from the former Soviet Union. This was a country in which the lack of civil and ethnic strife seemed exceptionally notable against the background of turmoil in neighbouring states.

      In June the Ukrainian parliament adopted a new constitution, despite sustained opposition from leftist deputies who had submitted an alternative draft on March 22 to restore a Soviet-style regime. The new constitution was accepted by 315 votes to 36 after an all-night sitting. It confirmed the authority of the president, maintained a unicameral parliament, and affirmed Ukrainian as the state language while making allowances for the use of other languages (Russian and Crimean Tatar, for example) in areas where they were the primary languages spoken.

      A new government was formed in September with a distinctly reformist hue. Earlier, on May 27, Prime Minister Yevhen Marchuk had been replaced with Pavlo Lazarenko, a close colleague of Pres. Leonid Kuchma's from the Dnipropetrovsk region, one of whose stated aims was to accelerate foreign investment in Ukraine.

      Ukraine's economic performance was sluggish, with most revenue being used to pay off wage arrears amounting to $200 million in the state sector alone. The share of output from privatized firms was reportedly 48% by the middle of the year, however. With inflation under control, the government achieved a psychological breakthrough in September with the introduction of a new currency, the hryvnia. On March 25 the government raised the minimum wage by over 30% to $36 per month. Lazarenko's economic reforms suffered a setback in November, however, when the Supreme Council rejected his proposed budget.

      The giant coal sector again endured a year of strikes and protests concomitantly with a very high accident rate. In March Marchuk announced that some 70 nonlucrative mines could be closed in the next few years. The next month, however, the World Bank stated that the optimal figure would be double this number and offered $300 million in credit for reforms in the Ukrainian coal industry, with a 17-year term of repayment. Although Ukraine was making significant progress toward democracy, its living standards remained low. The population showed a negative growth rate, and epidemics of hepatitis broke out in Donetsk and Sevastopol as a result of the pollution of the water supply by untreated industrial waste. Diphtheria was increasingly common.

      The year marked the 10th anniversary of the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power station. That event was marked by the G-7 summit meeting in Moscow on April 19-20, at which leaders of the Group of Seven leading industrial nations and Russia committed just over $3 billion worth of international assistance to Ukraine to close the station permanently by the year 2000 and to complete reactors under construction at the Khmelnytsky and South Ukraine stations.

      The year was to have seen the signing of a Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation with Russia, scheduled for early April. That meeting was canceled by Russian Pres. Boris Yeltsin, then in the midst of his election campaign, on the grounds that the question of the Black Sea Fleet had yet to be resolved. Though Ukraine voluntarily gave up some 80% of the fleet to the Russian side, the two nations still differed over the status of the city of Sevastopol, the longtime base of the Black Sea Fleet. The question was exacerbated by a Russian Duma (parliament) declaration that Sevastopol was a Russian city, following a similar statement by Moscow's Mayor Yury Luzhkov on January 17.

      While relations with Russia—particularly on energy issues and the use of the Druzhba oil pipeline link across Ukraine to the Czech Republic and Slovakia—were often difficult, relations with the U.S. and the European Union (EU) remained cordial. Ukraine kept its distance from the increased integration of the countries of the Commonwealth of Independent States, particularly the Russian-Belarusian "union" of April 2. In February Kuchma visited the U.S. and was offered more than $1 billion in financial assistance, which made Ukraine the third largest recipient of U.S. aid.

      Ukraine moved cautiously on the question of the expansion of NATO. On July 7, at a meeting of Central and Eastern European leaders in Salzburg, Austria, Kuchma declared that Ukraine was seeking a "special partnership" with NATO and associate partnership with the Western European Union, the defense sector of the EU. By the middle of the year, the last of the 1,600 strategic warheads on Ukrainian territory had been moved to Russia.

      Ukraine suffered a spate of terrorist attacks and individual assaults, including an attempt on July 16 to assassinate Lazarenko—while he was traveling to the airport on his way to Donetsk—and two bomb explosions in the centre of Sevastopol on September 18. The former governor of the Donetsk region, Volodymyr Shcherban, was dismissed after the attempt on Lazarenko and then was himself assassinated in early November. In September Kuchma announced the formation of an antiterrorist centre in a four-year program to combat crime. (DAVID R. MARPLES)

▪ 1996

      A republic in eastern Europe, Ukraine borders Russia to the north and east, the Black Sea to the south, Romania and Moldova to the southwest, and Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland to the west. Area: 603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi). Pop. (1995 est.): 52,003,000. Cap.: Kiev. Monetary unit: karbovanets (Ukrainian coupon), with (Oct. 6, 1995) a free rate of 172,000 karbovantsy = U.S. $1 (271,915 karbovantsy = £1 sterling). President in 1995, Leonid Kuchma; prime ministers, Vitaly Masol and, acting from March 1 and official from June 8, Yevhen Marchuk.

      The year 1995 could be described as a year of stabilizing trends in Ukraine. The country improved its international profile as a result of its acceptance on October 18 into the Council of Europe and because of its decision, late in the year, to close the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Relations with the United States also remained warm. U.S. Pres. Bill Clinton's visit to Kiev in May was followed by Prime Minister Yevhen Marchuk's trip to Washington in September.

      At the same time, Ukraine limited its commitment to the Commonwealth of Independent States, noting at a meeting in Tbilisi in mid-October that it firmly opposed the division of Europe into two blocs and rejected the notion of Ukraine as a buffer state between NATO and the CIS. Earlier in the year, Ukraine had asserted that the role of the CIS should be to decide matters of mutual economic concern rather than political and military issues. During a visit of Belarusian Pres. Alyaksandr Lukashenka to Kiev on September 23-24, Ukraine refused to accept the idea of a three-way customs union and implicitly rebuffed the Belarusian president's support for a "Slavic triangle."

      On February 8 Ukraine and Russia initialed the Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation, but the final signatures were never provided. First, in February, the two sides differed on the issue of dual citizenship, and later they disagreed over the Russian desire to maintain the city of Sevastopol as the home base exclusively of the Russian part of the Black Sea Fleet. The latter issue was ostensibly resolved at a meeting of the respective presidents, Leonid Kuchma and Boris Yeltsin, at Sochi, Russia, on June 8-9. Sevastopol was designated as the Russian base, and the two sides agreed to divide the fleet, with Russia receiving 82% of the ships. Nonetheless, other issues, including Yeltsin's illness and disagreements over the Crimea, served to delay the signing of the treaty indefinitely.

      Ukraine firmly asserted its authority over the recalcitrant Crimean Peninsula on March 17, abolishing the post of the separatist Crimean president, Yury Meshkov. The Ukrainian parliament also annulled the Crimean constitution and instituted direct rule from Kiev. The Crimea responded defiantly at first, resolving to hold a referendum on autonomy in June, but subsequently gave in to pressure from Kiev. The summer in Crimea was marred by violence in which four Crimean Tatars were killed, evidently by organized crime elements. The Tatars were also the subject of a major Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe conference that noted that 100,000 out of 250,000 on the peninsula were living in extreme conditions, without adequate shelter, and with very high rates of infant mortality. Some 70,000 Tatars who returned to their ancestral homeland after November 1991 were not yet eligible for Ukrainian citizenship and were effectively disenfranchised until 1996.

      The key event in Ukrainian domestic politics was a compromise reached between the president and the legislature over the division of powers (the so-called Power Bill). Following a vote of no confidence by the parliament on April 3, and strong opposition from the parliamentary left faction, the two sides reached an unexpected compromise on June 7. The agreement canceled President Kuchma's plans for a plebiscite on the Power Bill but implemented a Law on State Power that omitted both the parliament's right to impeach the president and the latter's right to dissolve the legislature.

      A new government was appointed on July 3 with 27 new officials. Marchuk, who was named prime minister on June 8, was the dominant figure. On October 11 the parliament issued a new government program aimed at gradual economic reform, an anticipated 0.6% rise in industrial output in 1996, and a state budget deficit to be limited to 6%.

      Economic performance in 1995 was mixed. Inflation stood at 21.2% in January, dropped to 4.6% in May, and then rose to 14% in September. The karbovanets appeared more stable than it had been (giving rise to speculation that the hryvnya currency would at last be introduced), but then it collapsed against the dollar in August, from 152,000 to 167,700 (and to 179,400 at year's end) and over 200,000 on the black market. Plans to close 19 unprofitable mines led to a brief coal strike in the Donbass region in October, while unemployment in real figures (including hidden unemployment) was estimated at almost four million, or about 15% of the workforce. Progress toward economic reform was, however, sufficient for the International Monetary Fund to provide three standby loans during the course of the year.

      The protracted discussions with the Group of Seven (G-7) major industrial countries over the closure of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant were finally resolved on December 20. In April President Kuchma had declared that the station would be closed by the year 2000, but Ukraine's decision was based on the premise that the West would assist with the construction of a thermal power station in the region. A figure of approximately $4 billion was cited by Ukraine to cover these developments. On September 25-27, G-7 experts suggested a figure of $1,440,000,000 and rejected the notion of a thermal station in favour of modernization of Ukraine's entire energy structure. The final agreement was signed in Ottawa by Yury Kostenko, the Ukrainian minister of the environment, and Sheila Copps, Canadian deputy prime minister. (Canada held the rotating chairmanship of the G-7 in 1995.) It called for $2.3 billion in assistance to close the Chernobyl station by the year 2000, construct two safer nuclear power stations, and assist Ukraine in developing its energy sector.

      Ukraine's economic decline in recent years exacerbated the health situation within the country. On July 19, 256 cases of cholera were reported in Mykolayiv region, while in October hepatitis B infection killed 8 people and afflicted nearly 1,000 in Dnepropetrovsk and surrounding areas. Thyroid cancer rates rose fivefold in children in the wake of the Chernobyl disaster of 1986, while infant mortality in Ukraine was among the highest in Europe. The country was plagued by social problems, including a notable expansion of organized crime, while living standards continued to fall, albeit less catastrophically than in recent years. Gross domestic product fell by 12% between January and June, compared with 24% in the first six months of 1994.

      (DAVID R. MARPLES)

▪ 1995

      A republic in eastern Europe, Ukraine borders Russia to the north and east, the Black Sea to the south, Romania and Moldova to the southwest, and Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland to the west. Area: 603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi). Pop. (1994 est.): 52,304,000. Cap.: Kiev. Monetary unit: karbovanets (Ukrainian coupon), with (Oct. 7, 1994) a free rate of 30,028 karbovantsy = U.S. $1 (47,760 karbovantsy = £1 sterling). Presidents in 1994, Leonid Kravchuk and, from July 19, Leonid Kuchma; prime ministers, Yukhim Zvyahilsky (acting) and, from June 16, Vitaly Masol.

      Politically, 1994 in Ukraine was dominated by election campaigns. The parliamentary elections of March 27 were indecisive because of the election law that required participation by at least 50% of the electorate and stipulated that a candidate had to receive over 50% of the vote to win a seat. In the Donetsk and Luhanske regions, the elections also saw referenda on the status of the Russian language, with heavy support for the adoption of the latter as a second state language. An attempt to attain the same provision for the whole country was defeated in the parliament after strong opposition from nationalists and several skirmishes between deputies. By April 11, 337 of 450 deputies had been elected, and by August the figure had risen to 393; most (219) of the deputies elected were nonaligned. The Communists, with 91 seats, maintained a plurality and formed a powerful faction with the Socialists and Agrarians. The democratic segment of the parliament was dominated by Rukh members, with some 30 seats; the remaining parties together elected some 20 deputies by the April runoffs.

      A stalemate in the parliament led Pres. Leonid Kravchuk to try—unsuccessfully—to postpone the June 26 presidential elections. The incumbent president was defeated in the second round on July 10 by former prime minister Leonid Kuchma (see BIOGRAPHIES (Kuchma, Leonid Danylovych )), who received 52.14% of the votes cast, compared with Kravchuk's 45.06%. The voting divided the country along the Dnieper River, with the eastern regions backing Kuchma and western Ukraine voting heavily in favour of Kravchuk. Kuchma acted quickly to subordinate the Cabinet of Ministers and local councils to his control. Visits to Canada and the U.S. (in October and November, respectively) raised his international profile significantly.

      The volatile Crimean oblast elected a separatist pro-Russian president, Yury Meshkov, in a runoff election on January 30, and a series of constitutional disputes between Kiev and the autonomous oblast ensued. The Crimean parliament voted on May 20 to resurrect a 1992 constitution weakening its ties with Ukraine. The dispute also centred on the question of Ukrainian or Russian control of the Black Sea Fleet and the status of the city of Sevastopol, which declared itself a Russian city on August 23. The decision was rescinded immediately by the Ukrainian parliament, and Meshkov's impending revolt soon collapsed. On September 7 the parliament voted to curtail his powers and to institute a collective leadership. On October 6 Anatoliy Franchuk was appointed prime minister of Crimea. In the meantime, Kiev demanded that the Crimeans bring their constitution and laws into line with those of Ukraine by November 1. This was not carried out, and on November 17 the Ukrainian parliament rescinded a long list of laws adopted by Crimea.

      Deep economic recession and shortages of power and heating plagued Ukrainians during 1994. Throughout the year Russia and Turkmenistan restricted fuel supplies to Ukraine because of the nonpayment of some $2 billion of debts. The gross national product in Ukraine fell by 18% in the first nine months of the year compared with the corresponding period in 1993. Industrial output dropped 31%, and there was a corresponding 24% fall in labour productivity. In the main, these dramatic figures reflected the decline in traditional heavy industries, such as metallurgy, machine building, chemicals, building materials, and light industry. In addition, coal industry production was expected to be down.

      Ukraine's temporary currency, the karbovanets, plunged against the dollar, from 47,000 in May to around 140,000 in early December. By July only about 5% of all production was fully in private hands, and on July 29 the parliament resolved to postpone further privatization on the grounds that the shadow economy was in the hands of criminal elements. On October 11 the new president announced a new economic program based on the freeing of prices, the privatization of land and property, and a monetary reform that would see the belated introduction of a new currency, the hryvnya, and prompt payment of salaries. At the end of the year, however, the economic prognosis for the country remained gloomy.

      On March 21 the director of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Hans Blix, declared that the Chernobyl nuclear power plant failed to meet international standards. The Ukrainian authorities were reluctant to close the plant, however, without alternative power sources and adequate compensation. The key question was the cost of shutting down Chernobyl and commissioning new reactors at the Khmelnytsky, Rivne, and Zaporizhzhya atomic stations. A referendum at the giant Zaporizhzhya nuclear station on June 26, however, rejected a proposal to add a sixth reactor and establish a nuclear-waste site there. By late November Ukrainian nuclear officials had agreed on the need to close down Chernobyl eventually but rejected what they perceived as the relatively paltry sums offered for assistance by the international community.

      Ukraine also reached an agreement with the International Monetary Fund—conditional upon the introduction of market reforms and control over inflation and debts—for the receipt of $2 billion in loans over a three-year period. An initial loan of $360 million was granted on September 29. Both the U.S. and Canada pledged significant aid to Ukraine: $900 million on the part of the U.S. to support privatization and food and fuel imports, and $17.6 million in technical assistance from Canada. A further $5.5 billion was committed by a Group of Seven conference in Winnipeg, Man., on October 27 to assist Ukraine's reforms, shut down Chernobyl, and harness new nuclear reactors.

      Ukraine made significant progress on disarmament when the parliament ratified the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks Treaty (START I) on February 3, decided to join NATO's Partnership for Peace Program on February 8, and ratified and signed on December 5 the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty.

      The year was also notable for Kuchma's campaign against corruption, which resulted in the order for the arrest of former acting prime minister Yukhim Zvyahilsky in mid-November on charges of embezzlement. A horrific outbreak of cholera in southern Ukraine in September claimed at least 17 lives, with over 650 recorded cases.

      (DAVID R. MARPLES)

▪ 1994

      A republic in eastern Europe, Ukraine borders Russia to the north and east, the Black Sea to the south, Romania and Moldova to the southwest, and Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland to the west. Area: 603,700 sq km (233,100 sq mi). Pop. (1993 est.): 52,344,000. Cap.: Kiev. Monetary unit: karbovanets (Ukrainian coupon), with (Oct. 4, 1993) a free rate of 16,827 karbovantsy = U.S. $1 (25,493 karbovantsy = £1 sterling). President in 1993, Leonid Kravchuk; prime ministers, Leonid Kuchma to September 22 and, until September 27 Yefim Zvagilsky; vacant thereafter.

       Ukraine began 1993 in a state of "economic crisis" that grew more severe with time: inflation approached 50% per month; and the 1992 deficit of 1,325 trillion karbovantsy was still on the rise; and Russia reduced oil and gas supplies and raised its prices close to world levels. The Cabinet of Ministers created an extraordinary committee, headed by Prime Minister Leonid Kuchma, which introduced an emergency plan to prevent economic collapse, advocating strict limits on the growth of the money supply, rapid privatization, and incentives for foreign investment. By August, however, the currency had begun a "free fall," dropping from under 6,000 to the dollar on August 12 to 19,000 one week later.

      Industrial output also fell sharply in the summer, partly because of a miners' strike that began in the Donbass coalfields in early June and soon spread to other industries. The workers' action became political in nature, with demands for pay raises to match increases in the cost of living, calls for economic autonomy for the Donbass or its transfer to Russia, and demands for a confidence vote in the government and presidency. Pres. Leonid Kravchuk responded with economic concessions and called for new elections for both Parliament and the presidency. Viktor Pynzenyk, Kravchuk's deputy prime minister with responsibility for economic reform, resigned in late August, claiming that the conservative Parliament was making economic reforms impossible.

      By late autumn Ukraine appeared to have come full circle, returning to state control after a brief "market" experiment. Kravchuk accepted Kuchma's resignation and took over the government himself. New laws were established to fix prices for wholesale and retail goods. Critical problems in the energy sector were also resolved in a controversial fashion when on October 21 Parliament lifted the 1990 moratorium on commissioning new nuclear reactors. On the same day, Parliament decided not to shut down the Chernobyl atomic power plant by the end of 1993 as originally scheduled, a decision that provoked warnings from the European Community and the International Atomic Energy Agency about safety problems with Ukraine's reactors.

      About 34% of Ukraine's electricity was being produced by nuclear power. That percentage was likely to increase (even though potentially serious accidents had occurred at several of its nuclear power stations) because Russian oil and gas had to be purchased with precious hard currency.

      Ukraine's strategic nuclear weapons elicited world concern as well. Parliament equivocated over whether to ratify the START I Treaty, and there was an extended debate about whether Ukraine's 46 SS-24 strategic missiles were even covered by that treaty in the original Lisbon Protocol. Ukraine insisted that disarmament could not take place without international guarantees of its security. On November 18, Parliament voted to ratify the START I Treaty and the Lisbon Protocol, with the reservation that Article 5, which committed Ukraine to joining the nonproliferation treaty as a nonnuclear state, would not apply. Moreover, ratification was made conditional on adequate compensation for the delivery of the tactical nuclear warheads delivered to Russia in 1992, foreign compensation to cover the costs of disarmament, and security guarantees of Ukraine's existing borders—none of which was immediately forthcoming. However, by year's end Ukraine had dismantled 17 of the SS-24s as a show of good faith.

      Territorial issues were perhaps Ukraine's main political concern and were the focal point of relations with Russia. Kravchuk and Russian Pres. Boris Yeltsin held several meetings during the year, the most significant of which was at Massandra in the Crimea on September 3. Yeltsin declared (without contradiction from Kravchuk) after the meeting that Ukraine had agreed to sell its half of the Black Sea Fleet to Russia and that Ukraine would permit Russia to dismantle nuclear weapons currently in the country in return for uranium extracted from their warheads. The accord was not ratified by the Ukrainian Parliament, however, and the affair diminished Kravchuk's credibility in the country. Parliament later approved a military doctrine, which called for a reduction in the size of Ukraine's army from more than 525,000 troops to 450,000 by 1995.

      In July, Russia laid claim to the Crimean city of Sevastopol (on the grounds that it was not included in the 1954 treaty that ceded Crimea to Ukraine), thereby exacerbating an already tense situation in the peninsula, which had a large Russian majority and was the home port of the Black Sea Fleet. Crimean separatists added to Kiev's woes.

      Ukraine faced other threats to its current territory as well. Ruthenians tried to establish a provisional government in Transcarpathia; Donetsk province expressed a desire to join the Russian Federation; and Romania maintained its claim to parts of Bessarabia and the Chernovtsy (Romanian: Cernauti) region.

      By October the Kravchuk government had laid the groundwork for a future regime based on stronger central control. Economic recovery, however, proved elusive. Kravchuk had become the sole figure in political life, though Kuchma remained popular. Neither the Rukh nor any of the 29 political parties registered by year's end had presented a viable alternative economic program or fielded a potential rival for the presidency. Indeed, a feature of 1993 was the political decline of "democratic" candidates. On October 5 the Ministry of Justice officially registered the Communist Party of Ukraine, with a reported membership of 128,000. The election bill approved by Parliament in November established 450 single-mandate electoral districts. Ukraine's "first past the post" election law would likely favour the Communists, who had a powerful organization in the eastern cities that should ensure that their candidates received a plurality of the votes. (DAVID R. MARPLES)

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Introduction
Ukraine, flag of   country located in eastern Europe, the second largest on the continent after Russia. The capital is Kiev (Kyiv), located on the Dnieper River in north-central Ukraine.

      A fully independent Ukraine emerged only late in the 20th century, after long periods of successive domination by Poland-Lithuania, Russia, and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.). Ukraine had experienced a brief period of independence in 1918–20, but portions of western Ukraine were ruled by Poland, Romania, and Czechoslovakia in the period between the two World Wars, and Ukraine thereafter became part of the Soviet Union as the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (S.S.R.). When the Soviet Union began to unravel in 1990–91, the legislature of the Ukrainian S.S.R. declared sovereignty (July 16, 1990) and then outright independence (Aug. 24, 1991), a move that was confirmed by popular approval in a plebiscite (Dec. 1, 1991). With the dissolution of the U.S.S.R. in December 1991, Ukraine gained full independence. The country changed its official name to Ukraine, and it helped to found the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), an association of countries that were formerly republics of the Soviet Union.

Land
 Ukraine is bordered by Belarus to the north, Russia to the east, the Sea of Azov (Azov, Sea of) and the Black Sea to the south, Moldova and Romania to the southwest, and Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland to the west. In the far southeast, Ukraine is separated from Russia by the Kerch Strait, which connects the Sea of Azov to the Black Sea.

Relief
       Ukraine occupies the southwestern portion of the Russian Plain (East European Plain). The country consists almost entirely of level plains at an average elevation of 574 feet (175 metres) above sea level. Mountainous areas such as the Ukrainian Carpathians and Crimean Mountains occur only on the country's borders and account for barely 5 percent of its area. The Ukrainian landscape nevertheless has some diversity: its plains are broken by highlands—running in a continuous belt from northwest to southeast—as well as by lowlands.

      The rolling plain of the Dnieper Upland, which lies between the middle reaches of the Dnieper (Dnieper River) (Dnipro) and Southern Buh (Pivdennyy Buh, or the Boh) rivers in west-central Ukraine, is the largest highland area; it is dissected by many river valleys, ravines, and gorges, some more than 1,000 feet (300 metres) deep. On the west the Dnieper Upland is abutted by the rugged Volyn-Podilsk Upland, which rises to 1,545 feet (471 metres) at its highest point, Mount Kamula. West of the Volyn-Podilsk Upland, in extreme western Ukraine, the parallel ranges of the Carpathian Mountains—one of the most picturesque areas in the country—extend for more than 150 miles (240 km). The mountains range in height from about 2,000 feet (600 metres) to about 6,500 feet (2,000 metres), rising to 6,762 feet (2,061 metres) at Mount Hoverla, the highest point in the country. The northeastern and southeastern portions of Ukraine are occupied by low uplands rarely reaching an elevation of 1,000 feet (300 metres).

      Among the country's lowlands are the Pripet Marshes (Polissya), which lie in the northern part of Ukraine and are crossed by numerous river valleys. In east-central Ukraine is the Dnieper Lowland, which is flat in the west and gently rolling in the east. To the south, another lowland extends along the shores of the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov; its level surface, broken only by low rises and shallow depressions, slopes gradually toward the Black Sea. The shores of the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov (Azov, Sea of) are characterized by narrow, sandy spits of land that jut out into the water; one of these, the Arabat Spit, is about 70 miles (113 km) long but averages less than 5 miles (8 km) in width.

 The southern lowland continues in the Crimean Peninsula as the North Crimean Lowland. The peninsula—a large protrusion into the Black Sea—is connected to the mainland by the Perekop Isthmus. The Crimean Mountains form the southern coast of the peninsula. Mount Roman-Kosh (Roman-Kosh, Mount), at 5,069 feet (1,545 metres), is the mountains' highest point.

Drainage
 Almost all the major rivers in Ukraine flow northwest to southeast through the plains to empty into the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov. The Dnieper River, with its hydroelectric dams, huge reservoirs, and many tributaries, dominates the entire central part of Ukraine. Of the total course of the Dnieper, 609 miles (980 km) are in Ukraine, making it by far the longest river in the country, of which it drains more than half. Like the Dnieper, the Southern Buh, with its major tributary, the Inhul, flows into the Black Sea. To the west and southwest, partly draining Ukrainian territory, the Dniester (Dniester River) (Dnistro) also flows into the Black Sea; among its numerous tributaries, the largest in Ukraine are the Stryy and the Zbruch. The middle course of the Donets River, a tributary of the Don (Don River), flows through southeastern Ukraine and is an important source of water for the Donets Basin (Donbas). The Danube River flows along the southwestern frontier of Ukraine. Marshland, covering almost 3 percent of Ukraine, is found primarily in the northern river valleys and in the lower reaches of the Dnieper, Danube, and other rivers.

      The rivers are most important as a water supply, and for this purpose a series of canals has been built, such as the Donets–Donets Basin, the Dnieper–Kryvyy Rih, and the North Crimea. Several of the larger rivers are navigable, including the Dnieper, Danube, Dniester, Pripet (Pripet River), Donets, and Southern Buh (in its lower course). Dams and hydroelectric plants are situated on all the larger rivers.

      Ukraine has a few natural lakes, all of them small and most of them scattered over the river floodplains. One of the largest is Lake Svityaz, 11 square miles (28 square km) in area, in the northwest. Small saltwater lakes occur in the Black Sea Lowland and in the Crimea. Larger saline lakes occur along the coast. Known as limans, these bodies of water form at the mouths of rivers or ephemeral streams and are blocked off by sandbars from the sea. Some artificial lakes have been formed, the largest of which are reservoirs at hydroelectric dams—e.g., the reservoir on the Dnieper upstream from Kremenchuk. The Kakhovka, Dnieper, Dniprodzerzhynsk, Kaniv, and Kiev reservoirs make up the rest of the Dnieper cascade. Smaller reservoirs are located on the Dniester and Southern Buh rivers and on tributaries of the Donets River. Small reservoirs for water supply also are found near Kryvyy Rih, Kharkiv, and other industrial cities. Three large artesian basins—the Volyn-Podilsk, the Dnieper, and the Black Sea—are exceptionally important for municipal needs and agriculture as well.

Soils
      From northwest to southeast the soils of Ukraine may be divided into three major aggregations: a zone of sandy podzolized (Podzol) soils; a central belt consisting of the black, extremely fertile Ukrainian chernozems; and a zone of chestnut and salinized soils.

      The podzolized soils occupy about one-fifth of the country's area, mostly in the north and northwest. These soils were formed by the extension of postglacial forests into regions of grassy steppe; most such soils may be farmed, although they require the addition of nutrients to obtain good harvests.

      The chernozems of central Ukraine, among the most fertile soils in the world, occupy about two-thirds of the country's area. These soils may be divided into three broad groups: in the north a belt of the so-called deep chernozems, about 5 feet (1.5 metres) thick and rich in humus; south and east of the former, a zone of prairie, or ordinary, chernozems, which are equally rich in humus but only about 3 feet (1 metre) thick; and the southernmost belt, which is even thinner and has still less humus. Interspersed in various uplands and along the northern and western perimeters of the deep chernozems are mixtures of gray forest soils and podzolized black-earth soils, which together occupy much of Ukraine's remaining area. All these soils are very fertile when sufficient water is available. However, their intensive cultivation, especially on steep slopes, has led to widespread soil erosion and gullying.

      The smallest proportion of the soil cover consists of the chestnut soils of the southern and eastern regions. They become increasingly salinized to the south as they approach the Black Sea.

Climate
      Ukraine lies in a temperate climatic zone influenced by moderately warm, humid air from the Atlantic Ocean. Winters in the west are considerably milder than those in the east. In summer, on the other hand, the east often experiences higher temperatures than the west. Average annual temperatures range from about 42–45 °F (5.5–7 °C) in the north to about 52–55 °F (11–13 °C) in the south. The average temperature in January, the coldest month, is about 26 °F (−3 °C) in the southwest and about 18 °F (−8 °C) in the northeast. The average in July, the hottest month, is about 73 °F (23 °C) in the southeast and about 64 °F (18 °C) in the northwest.

      Precipitation is uneven, with two to three times as much falling in the warmer seasons as in the cold. Maximum precipitation generally occurs in June and July, while the minimum falls in February. Snow falls mainly in late November and early December; accumulation varies in depth from a few inches in the steppe region (in the south) to several feet in the Carpathians. Western Ukraine, notably the Carpathian Mountains area, receives the highest annual precipitation—more than 47 inches (1,200 mm). The lowlands along the Black Sea and in the Crimea, by contrast, receive less than 16 inches (400 mm) annually. The remaining areas of Ukraine receive 16 to 24 inches (400 to 600 mm) of precipitation.

 In contrast to the rest of Ukraine, the southern shore of the Crimea has a warm, gentle, Mediterranean-type climate. Winters are mild and rainy, with little snow, and the average January temperature is 39 °F (4 °C). Summers are dry and hot, with an average July temperature of 75 °F (24 °C).

Plant and animal life
      Though much of Ukraine's original plant cover has been cleared for cultivation, three main zones of natural vegetation are still distinguishable. From north to south, they are the Polissya (woodland and marsh), the forest-steppe, and the steppe.

      The Polissya zone lies in the northwest and north. More than one-third of its area—about 44,000 square miles (114,000 square km)—is arable land. Nearly one-quarter of it is covered with mixed woodland, including oak, elm, birch, hornbeam, ash, maple, pine, linden, alder, poplar, willow, and beech. About 5 percent is peat bog, a substantial portion is marshland, and the river valleys are floodplains. The Polissya contains the southernmost portions of the Pripet Marshes, and Ukraine has undertaken major efforts to drain these swamplands and reclaim the land for agriculture.

      The forest-steppe, which covers an area of about 78,000 square miles (202,000 square km), extends south from the Polissya. About two-thirds of this agricultural region is arable land; forests take up only about one-eighth of the area.

      Farther south, near the Black Sea, Sea of Azov, and Crimean Mountains, the forest-steppe joins the steppe zone, which is about 89,000 square miles (231,000 square km) in area. Many of the flat, treeless plains in this region are under cultivation, although low annual precipitation and hot summers make supplemental irrigation necessary. Remnants of the natural vegetation of the steppe, including its characteristic fescue and feather grasses, are protected in nature reserves.

      Other natural regions are found near the borders of the country. Most of the country's rich forestlands are in the Carpathian region of western Ukraine. The lower mountain slopes are covered with mixed forests and the intermediate slopes with pine forests; these give way to Alpine meadows at higher altitudes. Along the southern coast of the Crimean Peninsula, a narrow strip of land, only about 6 miles (10 km) wide, constitutes a unique natural region where both deciduous and evergreen grasses and shrubs grow.

      The animal life of Ukraine is diverse, with about 350 species of birds, more than 100 species of mammals, and more than 200 species of fish. The most common predators are wolves, foxes, wildcats, and martens, while hoofed animals include roe deer, wild pigs, and sometimes elk and mouflons (a species of wild sheep). The wide variety of rodents includes gophers, hamsters, jerboas, and field mice. The major bird species are black and hazel grouse, owls, gulls, and partridges, as well as many migrating birds, such as wild geese, ducks, and storks. Among the fish are pike, carp, bream, perch, sturgeons, and sterlets. Introduced and well-acclimatized wildlife includes muskrats, raccoons, beavers, nutrias, and silver foxes.

      Numerous nature and game reserves reflect Ukraine's commitment to the conservation of its biological heritage. The country's first nature reserve, Askaniya-Nova, began as a private wildlife refuge in 1875; today it protects a portion of virgin steppe. Some 40 different mammals, including the onager and Przewalski's horse, have been introduced there as part of a successful program of breeding endangered species; ostriches also have been successfully introduced. The separate sections of the Ukrainian Steppe Reserve also preserve various types of steppe. The Black Sea Nature Reserve shelters many species of waterfowl and is the only Ukrainian breeding ground of the Mediterranean gull (Larus melanocephalus). Also located on the Black Sea, the Danube Water Meadows Reserve protects the Danube River's tidewater biota. Other reserves in Ukraine preserve segments of the forest-steppe woodland, the marshes and forests of the Polissya, and the mountains and rocky coast of the Crimea.

Environmental concerns
      During the Soviet period, rapid industrialization, intensive farming, and a lack of effective pollution controls combined to seriously degrade the environment in Ukraine. Some of the most polluted areas in the world are now found there.

      The coal-burning industries of eastern Ukraine, which emit high levels of sulfur dioxide, hydrocarbons, and dust, have created severe air pollution throughout the region. Air quality is particularly poor in the cities of Dnipropetrovsk, Kryvyy Rih, and Zaporizhzhya. Lightly industrialized cities in the west, such as Uzhhorod and Khmelnytskyy, face air pollution caused by the prevalence of inefficient automobiles burning leaded gasoline.

      Major rivers, including the Dnieper, Dniester, Inhul, and Donets, are seriously polluted with chemical fertilizers and pesticides from agricultural runoff and with poorly treated or untreated sewage. Coastal water pollution in the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea has necessitated the closing of beaches and has led to a dramatic reduction in fish catches. The freshwater flow into the Sea of Azov has been largely diverted for irrigation purposes, leading to a sharp increase in salinity.

      The 1986 accident (Chernobyl accident) at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant created severe environmental problems in northwestern Ukraine (see Chernobyl accident). Vast areas of land are contaminated by dangerous short- and long-lived radioactive isotopes, notably strontium-90, which can replace calcium in foods and become concentrated in bones and teeth. Contaminated agricultural lands near Chernobyl will be unsafe for thousands of years, though some of these areas continue to be occupied and farmed. Several thousand premature deaths from cancer are expected over the long term.

People (Ukraine)

Ethnic groups
      When Ukraine was a part of the Soviet Union (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics), a policy of Russian (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) in-migration and Ukrainian out-migration was in effect, and ethnic Ukrainians' share of the population in Ukraine declined from 77 percent in 1959 to 73 percent in 1991. But that trend reversed after the country gained independence, and, by the turn of the 21st century, ethnic Ukrainians made up more than three-quarters of the population. Russians continue to be the largest minority, though they now constitute less than one-fifth of the population. The remainder of the population includes Belarusians, Moldovans, Bulgarians, Poles, Hungarians, Romanians, Roma (Gypsies), and other groups. The Crimean Tatars (Tatar), who were forcibly deported to Uzbekistan and other Central Asian republics in 1944, began returning to the Crimea in large numbers in 1989; by the early 21st century they constituted one of the largest non-Russian minority groups.

      Historically, Ukraine had large Jewish and Polish populations, particularly in the Right Bank region (west of the Dnieper River). In fact, in the late 19th century slightly more than one-quarter of the world's Jewish population (estimated at 10 million) lived in ethnic Ukrainian territory. This predominantly Yiddish-speaking population was greatly reduced by emigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and by the devastation of the Holocaust. In the late 1980s and early '90s, large numbers of Ukraine's remaining Jews emigrated, mainly to Israel. At the turn of the 21st century, the several hundred thousand Jews left in Ukraine made up less than 1 percent of the Ukrainian population. Most of Ukraine's large Polish minority was resettled in Poland after World War II as part of a Soviet plan to have ethnic settlement match territorial boundaries.

Languages
      The vast majority of people in Ukraine speak Ukrainian (Ukrainian language), which is written with a form of the Cyrillic alphabet. The language—belonging with Russian and Belarusian to the East Slavic branch of the Slavic language (Slavic languages) family—is closely related to Russian but also has distinct similarities to the Polish language. Significant numbers of people in the country speak Polish, Yiddish, Rusyn, Belarusian, Romanian or Moldovan, Bulgarian, Crimean Turkish, or Hungarian. Russian is the most important minority language.

      During the rule of imperial Russia and under the Soviet Union, Russian (Russian language) was the common language of government administration and public life in Ukraine. In 1989 Ukrainian once again became the country's official language. The status of Ukrainian as the sole official language was confirmed in the 1996 Ukrainian constitution. However, in the Crimea, which has an autonomous status within Ukraine and where there is a Russian-speaking majority, Russian is the official language. In addition, primary and secondary schools using Russian as the language of instruction still prevail in the Donets Basin and other areas with large Russian minorities.

Religion
 The predominant religion in Ukraine, practiced by more than half the population, is Eastern Orthodoxy. Most of the adherents belong to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church–Moscow Patriarchate, though the Ukrainian Orthodox Church–Kiev Patriarchate is important as well. A smaller number of Orthodox Christians belong to the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church. In western Ukraine the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church prevails. There are also significant numbers of Protestants, Roman Catholics, and independent Christians in the country. Minority religions include Islam—practiced primarily by the Crimean Tatars—and Judaism. More than one-tenth of Ukrainians are not religious.

Settlement patterns
 More than half the population lives in urban areas. High population densities occur in southeastern and south-central Ukraine, in the highly industrialized regions of the Donets Basin and the Dnieper Bend, which together contain more than one-third of the total urban population. Portions of western Ukraine and the Kiev area are densely populated as well. Besides the capital, major cities in Ukraine include Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Odessa, Zaporizhzhya, Lviv, and Kryvyy Rih. Of the rural population, more than half is found in large villages (1,000 to 5,000 inhabitants), and most of these people are employed in a rural economy based on farming. The highest rural population densities are found in the wide belt of forest-steppe extending east-west across central Ukraine, where the extremely fertile soils and balanced climatic conditions are most favourable for agriculture.

Economy
      Ukraine's modern economy was developed as an integral part of the larger economy of the Soviet Union (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics). Yet, while receiving a smaller share (16 percent in the 1980s) of the Soviet Union's investment funds and producing a greater proportion of goods with a lower set price, Ukraine was still able to produce a larger share of total output in the industrial (17 percent) and especially the agricultural (21 percent) sectors of the Soviet economy. In effect, a centrally directed transfer of wealth from Ukraine, amounting to one-fifth of its national income, helped to finance economic development in other parts of the Soviet Union, notably Russia and Kazakhstan.

      By the late Soviet period, however, the Ukrainian economy was under severe strain, and it contracted sharply early in the independence era. A period of extreme currency inflation in the early 1990s brought great hardship to most of the population. Despite early hopes that Ukrainian economic independence—with the concomitant end to the transfer of funds and resources to other parts of the Soviet Union—would alleviate the declining economy and standard of living, Ukraine entered a period of severe economic decline. Daily life in Ukraine became a struggle, particularly for those living on fixed incomes, as prices rose sharply. Citizens compensated in a number of ways: more than half grew their own food, workers often held two or three jobs, and many acquired basic necessities through a flourishing barter economy. By 1996, however, Ukraine had achieved a measure of economic stability. Inflation dropped to manageable levels, and the economy's decline slowed considerably. At the turn of the 21st century the economy finally began to grow.

Agriculture and fishing
      Partly due to rich soils and a favourable climate, Ukraine's crop production is highly developed. Its output of grain and potatoes is among the highest in Europe, and it is among the world's largest producers of sugar beets (sugar beet). Ukraine's livestock sector lags behind the crop sector, but its total output is still considerably larger than that of most other European countries.

      A considerable amount of the world's black soils are found in Ukraine's forest-steppe zone. These soils are exceptionally well suited for the cultivation of sugar beets, an important industrial crop, and wheat. Besides wheat (almost all of it fall-sown), Ukraine produces such grains as barley (mostly for animal feed), corn (maize, for feed), leguminous grains (also feed), oats, rye, millet, buckwheat, and rice (irrigated, in the Crimea). Potatoes are a major crop in the cooler regions in the north and in the Carpathian foothills. Sunflower seeds, the principal oil crop, are most common in the steppe zone, where castor beans, mustard, rape, flax, hemp, and poppy seeds also are grown for oil. In the southern steppes, especially where irrigation is used, tomatoes, peppers, and melons are grown as well. Truck farming or market gardening is particularly notable on the outskirts of such large cities as Kiev, Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Zaporizhzhya, and the conurbation of the Donets Basin. Fruit is grown throughout Ukraine, notably in the forest-steppe, Subcarpathia, Transcarpathia (in southwestern Ukraine), and especially the Crimea. Vineyards are common in the southern part of Ukraine, particularly in Transcarpathia and the Crimea.

      Cattle and pigs are raised throughout Ukraine. Concentrations of dairy herds occur primarily in the forest-steppe, especially in the vicinity of large cities, while beef cattle are more common in areas of natural pastures and hay fields, as in the Polissya and the Carpathian foothills. Sheep and goats are raised in the Carpathian Mountains and parts of the southern steppe and the Crimea. Chickens, geese, and turkeys are kept throughout Ukraine for meat and egg production, but large-scale broiler and egg-laying operations are concentrated close to the large cities. Bees are kept in all parts of Ukraine for pollination and the production of honey and wax; silkworm raising occurs in Transcarpathia.

 Whereas field-crop production and large-scale livestock and poultry operations were developed on collective and state farms in the Soviet period, small-scale gardening, fruit growing, and livestock raising traditionally have been carried on by private households. With the agricultural restructuring initiated by Soviet premier Mikhail Gorbachev (Gorbachev, Mikhail) in the late 1980s, the theretofore small private plots were allowed to expand, while collective and state farms were allowed to undergo some reorganization on the basis of group or family contract farming. After independence, the collective and state farms remained the purveyors of inputs and technology, while families or groups of families became the actual farming units through contractual arrangement. The declared intent of the Ukrainian government has been to bring about a gradual privatization of farming, but the existing agricultural infrastructure, which developed around collective and state farms, makes the conversion difficult and costly.

      The Black Sea estuaries and the Sea of Azov are Ukraine's main fishing grounds. Among the major rivers for fishing are the Dnieper, Danube, Dniester, Southern Buh, and Donets. Fish catches have declined because of heavy pollution.

Resources and power
      Ukraine has extremely rich and complementary mineral resources in high concentrations and close proximity to each other. Rich iron ore reserves located in the vicinity of Kryvyy Rih, Kremenchuk, Bilozerka, Mariupol, and Kerch form the basis of Ukraine's large iron-and-steel industry. One of the richest areas of manganese-bearing ores in the world is located near Nikopol. Bituminous and anthracite coal used for coke are mined in the Donets Basin. Energy for thermal power stations is obtained using the large reserves of brown coal found in the Dnieper River basin (north of Kryvyy Rih) and the bituminous coal deposits of the Lviv-Volyn basin. The coal mines of Ukraine are among the deepest in Europe. Many of them are considered dangerous because their depth contributes to increased levels of methane; methane-related explosions have killed numerous Ukrainian miners.

      Ukraine also has important deposits of titanium ore, bauxite, nepheline (a source of soda), alunite (a source of potash), and mercury (cinnabar, or mercuric sulfide) ores. A large deposit of ozokerite (a natural paraffin wax) occurs near the city of Boryslav. Subcarpathia possesses potassium salt deposits, and both Subcarpathia and the Donets Basin have large deposits of rock salt. Some phosphorites as well as natural sulfur are found in Ukraine.

      The three major areas producing natural gas and petroleum in Ukraine are the Subcarpathian region, exploited since the late 19th–early 20th centuries, and the Dnieper-Donets and Crimean regions, both developed since World War II. Following World War II, the extraction of natural gas in Ukraine soared until it accounted for one-third of the Soviet Union's total output in the early 1960s. Natural gas production declined after 1975, however, and a similar pattern of growth and exhaustion occurred with Ukraine's petroleum, ultimately making the republic a net importer of these fuels.

      The exploitation of petroleum and natural gas in Ukraine necessitated the creation of an extensive pipeline transport system. Natural gas from Dashava (in Subcarpathia) is piped to Lviv and then to Kiev. Natural gas from Shebelynka (in eastern Ukraine) is piped to Kharkiv; another line runs to Poltava and Kiev; a third goes to Dnipropetrovsk, Kryvyy Rih, and Odessa; and a fourth brings gas to Slov'yansk and other cities of the Donets Basin for municipal and industrial uses, including metallurgy. As a result of the Soviet Union's commitment to major gas exporting in the late 1960s and early '70s, two trunk pipelines were laid across Ukraine to bring gas to eastern and western Europe from Siberia and Orenburg in Russia. Petroleum from the Dolyna oil field in Subcarpathia is piped some 40 miles (65 km) to a refinery at Drohobych, and oil from fields in eastern Ukraine is piped to a refinery in Kremenchuk. Subsequently, larger petroleum trunk lines were added (some 700 miles [1,100 km]) to supply petroleum from western Siberia to refineries at Lysychansk, Kremenchuk, Kherson, and Odessa, as well as a 420-mile (675-km) segment of the Druzhba (“Friendship”) pipeline, which crosses western Ukraine to supply Siberian oil to other European countries. The pipelines connecting the Siberian oil and gas fields with Europe are a major economic asset for Ukraine, as their importance to Russia gives Ukraine leverage in negotiations over oil and gas imports. However, disputes between Ukraine and Russia have in the past led the latter to cut off its supply temporarily—negatively affecting Ukraine as well as the European Union, which depends on gas and oil from these pipelines.

      Most of the energy for industrial processes in Ukraine is provided by fossil fuels and nuclear power; hydroelectricity accounts for only a tiny percentage. Although coal production is substantial, Ukraine relies on imported oil and natural gas to satisfy its energy requirements. Thermal power stations are found in all parts of the country, though the largest are in the Donets Basin and along the Dnieper. A third electric energy–producing area is in the vicinity of the Lviv-Volyn coal basin, and in the Subcarpathian region there is a group of several power stations. Nuclear power (nuclear energy) stations are located near the cities of Khmelnytskyy, Rivne, and Zaporizhzhya, as well as along the Southern Buh River. The severe nuclear accident at one of the Chernobyl (Chernobyl accident) reactors in 1986 triggered a powerful environmental movement in Ukraine and spurred the drive toward political independence from the Soviet Union. The last working reactor at Chernobyl was closed in 2000.

Manufacturing
      Manufacturing is an extremely important sector of the Ukrainian economy, in terms of productivity and revenue earned. Products manufactured in the country include ferrous metals, transportation equipment and other types of heavy machinery, a variety of chemicals, food products, and other goods.

      Ukraine has a major ferrous metals industry and ranks among the top steel producers in the world. Cast iron, rolled steel, and steel pipe are produced mainly in the Donets Basin, which is the industrial heartland of the country.

      The country's heavy industries produce trucks, other automobiles, railway locomotives and freight cars, seagoing vessels, hydroelectric and thermal steam and gas turbines, and electric generators. In addition, residential and industrial construction demands hoisting and transportation equipment and other machinery for the building trades. Dozens of factories, found chiefly in Kharkiv, Odessa, Lviv, and Kherson, produce a wide range of agricultural equipment as well. During the Soviet period, plants in Ukraine assembled rockets and constructed naval vessels, including aircraft carriers. Subsequently, Ukraine emerged as an arms producer in its own right, although efforts have been made since 1991 to convert defense facilities to nonmilitary production. For instance, trolley buses are manufactured at Pivdenmash (Yuzhmash) in what was once the world's largest missile plant, and the tank factory at Kharkiv produces tractors.

      The Ukrainian chemical-equipment industry, accounting for one-third of former Soviet production, is mainly concentrated in Kiev, Sumy, Fastiv, and Korosten. The chemical industry includes coking and the manufacture of coke products, as well as the manufacture of mineral fertilizers, sulfuric acid, synthetic fibres, caustic soda, petrochemicals, photographic chemicals, and pesticides.

      One of the most important products of the Ukrainian food-processing industry is sugar (from sugar beets). The production of vegetable oil, mainly from sunflower seeds, is significant as well. Other processed foods include meat, grain, fruit, and dairy products; local fish-processing industries are found in the coastal cities, such as Odessa. wine comes from the Transcarpathian region and the Crimea, where the vintners of the Massandra group are established near Yalta. Ukraine also produces vodka, beer, and other beverages.

      Some of the principal products of light industry are textiles (both knitted and woven), ready-to-wear garments, and shoes. In addition, such consumer goods as television sets, refrigerators, and washing machines are produced. Machine-tool and instrument-manufacturing industries also have been developed.

Finance
      The National Bank of Ukraine serves as the country's central bank. It works to ensure the stability of the national currency, the hryvnya, which was introduced in 1996. A number of commercial banks provide financial services to companies and individuals, and securities are traded at Ukrainian stock exchanges. Legislation passed since independence encourages foreign investment, but complex business regulations and corruption problems have kept the level of investment relatively low.

Trade
      Russia remains Ukraine's most important trade partner. Ukraine also conducts a significant volume of trade with Germany, Italy, and Poland. Other trade partners include Turkmenistan, China, Turkey, and the United States. From Russia, Ukraine imports petroleum, petroleum products, and natural gas, as well as fabrics, footwear, printed matter, and many other products. Machinery, transportation equipment, and chemicals are both imported and exported. By sea, Ukraine exports its grain, sugar, iron ore, coal, and manganese.

Services
      Service industries constitute an increasingly important portion of the economy; their value accounts for more than half of Ukraine's gross domestic product. Among the leading service industries are those dealing with transportation and communications. Ukraine also exports certain services, particularly those related to transportation. Tourism has long been a key service industry on the southern shore of the Crimea. The beautiful environment and warm climate have attracted vacationers and health seekers for more than a century.

Labour and taxation
      Services now employ the largest number of Ukrainian workers, though a significant number of labourers continue to work in agriculture and manufacturing. Nearly half the women are economically active; however, employer discrimination against women has been a problem. More than half of all workers belong to trade unions, many of which are grouped into large labour federations.

      The Ukrainian government levies corporate and individual income taxes. It also collects value-added tax and excise taxes.

Transportation and telecommunications
      The flat relief of most of Ukraine presents few obstacles to transportation. Although by European standards the density of the country's hard-surface road network is low, asphalt-paved highways connect all the regions and large industrial centres. The links between Kiev and Moscow, Odessa–Kiev–St. Petersburg, Moscow–Kharkiv– Simferopol, Uzhhorod–Lviv–Rivne–Kiev, and Kiev–Kharkiv– Rostov-na-Donu (Russia) are highways of particular importance.

      The heaviest concentration of railroad trackage is in the Donets Basin and near the Dnieper River, especially its west bank. The largest railroad centres are Kharkiv, Kiev, Dnipropetrovsk, Bakhmach, Yasynuvata, Debaltseve, Lviv, Kovel, and Kup'yansk-Vuzlovyy.

      Ukrainian ports on the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov are found at Odessa, Illichivsk, Mykolayiv, Kherson, Feodosiya, Kerch, and Mariupol. River shipping is conducted primarily on the Dnieper and its tributaries (the Pripet and Desna), on the Southern Buh, and on the Danube, which is important in trade with other European countries. Ships on the Danube call at the port of Izmayil, which is accessible to oceangoing freighters and passenger liners. Through the Dnieper-Bug Canal, in Belarus, the inland waterways of Ukraine are joined to the Vistula River basin of Poland and to the Baltic Sea. Efforts to transform the Dnieper into a continuous deep waterway have been furthered by the creation of large reservoirs at hydroelectric stations. The largest ports on the Dnieper are Kiev, Dnipropetrovsk, Zaporizhzhya, and Kherson.

      Kiev is connected by air with all the regional centres of the country and with major cities throughout Europe and Asia, as well as with cities in North America and Australia. International airports in Ukraine include Boryspil near Kiev and those at Kharkiv, Lviv, and Odessa.

      Since independence, Ukraine has worked to improve its inadequate Soviet-era telephone system. The country is now linked to international fibre-optic and satellite systems. Meanwhile, cellular telephone usage has risen dramatically, though the percentage of people who subscribe to cellular services is lower than in neighbouring countries. The rates of Internet use and personal computer ownership have also lagged behind those of neighbouring countries.

Government and society
 The government of Ukraine underwent rapid change in the early 1990s. Before its declaration of independence in 1991, Ukraine was officially called the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (S.S.R.) and was part of the Soviet Union (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics). According to the 1937 Soviet constitution as amended in 1944, Ukraine had the right to “enter into direct relations with foreign states, to conclude agreements, and to exchange diplomatic and consular representatives with them” and to maintain its own military forces. The only real expression of these constitutional prerogatives in international affairs, however, was Ukraine's charter membership in the United Nations (UN) and consequently in some 70 other international organizations. (The Ukrainian S.S.R. and the Belorussian S.S.R. [now Belarus] were the only two UN members that were not fully sovereign countries.) The revised Soviet constitution of 1977 further limited the prerogatives of the Ukrainian S.S.R. Within days of the failed coup against Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, Ukraine proclaimed its independence on Aug. 24, 1991, and won overwhelming popular approval for this act in a referendum on Dec. 1, 1991. Ukraine was subsequently recognized by other governments, and many international agreements were signed, notably with neighbouring countries. In addition, Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia formed the Commonwealth of Independent States, which was then joined by eight other former republics of the defunct Soviet Union.

Constitutional framework
      Ukraine adopted a new constitution in 1996. Until that time, the Soviet-era constitution had remained in force, albeit with numerous adjustments.

      The highest legislative unit of the Ukrainian government is the unicameral Verkhovna Rada (Supreme Council of Ukraine), which succeeded the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian S.S.R. Changes to electoral laws in 1997 stipulated that half of the legislative seats be apportioned among members of the various political parties, according to their relative share of the popular vote. The other half of the legislators are elected from single-seat constituencies by a simple majority vote.

      The president, elected by direct popular vote for a five-year term, is the head of state. The president acts as the commander in chief of the armed forces, oversees executive ministries, and has the power to initiate and to veto legislation, though vetoes may be overturned. The president also chairs the National Security and Defense Council and determines its composition. The early period of Ukrainian independence was marked by a weak presidency and a strong parliament. In fact, Leonid Kravchuk (Kravchuk, Leonid), Ukraine's first democratically elected president, almost seemed to downplay his role. After his election in 1994, President Leonid Kuchma (Kuchma, Leonid) set out to redefine the structures of power in Ukraine. In 1995 the parliament agreed to the so-called “Law on Power,” which substantially enhanced the role of the executive branch of government, and in 1996 the new constitution gave the presidency considerably more power. However, constitutional reforms that took effect in 2006 shifted some power away from the president to the prime minister.

      The head of government is the prime minister, who is effectively selected by the majority in parliament. The prime minister appoints the members of the cabinet, apart from the foreign and defense ministers, who are chosen by the president. The cabinet, headed by the prime minister, coordinates the day-to-day administration of the government and may introduce legislation to the Supreme Council.

Local government
      Ukraine is a unitary republic, not a federal state. The country is divided administratively into a number of provinces called oblasti; two cities—Kiev and Sevastopol—carry the same status as an oblast. The Crimea is an autonomous republic within Ukraine.

Justice
      The highest court in the judicial system is the Supreme Court of Ukraine, consisting of five judges elected for five-year terms by the Supreme Council. The court's function is to supervise judicial activities. Constitutional matters are determined by the Constitutional Court.

Political process
      Citizens over age 17 have the right to vote. Until 1990 the only legal political party in Ukraine was the Communist Party of Ukraine (CPU), which was a branch of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Major legislation approved by the Ukrainian Supreme Soviet originated in, or was approved by, the CPU. A change to the Ukrainian constitution in October 1990 allowed nascent political parties to be officially recognized. Subsequently, a wide array of parties emerged. Many parties, however, have lacked strong organizational bases and coherent platforms, and individual parties have tended to join together in parliament as blocs.

      The centre-right, nationalistic Popular Movement of Ukraine, or Rukh, founded in 1989, was instrumental in the campaign for Ukrainian independence but afterward lost strength. The CPU—re-formed in 1993 after a 1991 ban on the Soviet-era CPU was lifted—retains support, mainly in the industrialized and Russophone reaches of eastern Ukraine and among older voters. Several other parties, such as the Socialist Party of Ukraine and the Social Democratic Party of Ukraine, have had socialist, if not Marxist-Leninist, orientations. During the Kuchma presidency (1994–2005), a number of opposition parties coalesced. These parties supported the 2004 Orange Revolution, a series of mass protests that helped to bring Viktor Yushchenko (Yushchenko, Viktor) to the presidency in 2005. The most important of these pro-Western “Orange” parties were Yushchenko's Our Ukraine (known from 2007 as Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense) and the eponymous bloc of Yuliya Tymoshenko, leader of the Fatherland party. Yushchenko's rival Viktor Yanukovych—who had been Kuchma's choice as his successor—headed the popular Party of Regions, which supported stronger ties to Russia.

Security
      In 1991, at the time of independence, approximately 750,000 members of the Soviet armed forces were stationed within Ukraine's borders. The Ukrainian government quickly brought these forces under its command. Early in 1992 the military personnel on Ukrainian soil were required to swear an oath of allegiance to the new Ukrainian state; if they refused, they were provided with funds to leave the country. In the subsequent years, Ukraine reduced the size of its armed forces by several hundred thousand troops.

      Nevertheless, Ukraine's military—consisting of army, air force, and navy branches and a substantial reserve force—is still one of the largest in Europe. Its size is maintained through conscription; a period of military service is compulsory for men between the ages of 18 and 25. Ukrainian armed forces have seen active duty in a number of peacekeeping missions around the world.

      Ukraine is a member of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe. It has sought membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

Health and welfare
      Health care is financed through a combination of state and private funding, but money for improvement in the system remains scarce. Ukraine emerged from the Soviet period with an extensive infrastructure of health care facilities, including hospitals, workplace- and school-based medical centres, rest homes, and women's clinics, but these facilities deteriorated badly during the postindependence economic downturn. A lack of medicine and equipment, underfunded medical schools, and low wages for health care providers also have contributed to a significant decline in the quality of health care.

      Following independence, the social welfare system of the Soviet period was restructured and expanded. Benefits were partially linked to inflation, and measures were adopted to assist workers displaced by the transition to a market-oriented economy. About one-quarter of the population receives a pension; other components of the social insurance system include family allowances for households with children, birth and maternity benefits, and disability pay. The system is financed through a payroll tax.

Education
      In the 17th century an impressive degree of literacy (for the time) could be found in Ukraine. With Ukraine's declining political fortunes, however, the rate of popular literacy dropped. By the time of the Russian Revolution of 1917, more than 70 percent of Ukraine's population was illiterate. The Soviets' policy of compulsory education helped to wipe out illiteracy in the younger generation, and virtually the entire adult population can now read and write.

      Children must attend school for eight years. About three-quarters of the teachers are women; the student-teacher ratio is low. Since independence, the curriculum has increasingly emphasized Ukrainian history and literature. Private and religious schools, virtually nonexistent in the Soviet era, began to appear in the 1990s. In addition, general and correspondence schools allow young industrial and agricultural workers to receive an education without interrupting their work.

      The first institution of higher learning in Ukraine, the Kievan Mohyla Academy, was established in 1615; it was an important intellectual centre for the Orthodox world until its closing in 1817. Ukraine's educated classes were also well served by the establishment of universities in Kharkiv (1805), Kiev (1834), and Odessa (1865), as well as Lviv (1784) and Chernivtsi (1875) in western Ukraine. After Ukraine's independence in 1991, those institutions became state universities, and the Mohyla Academy was reestablished as a university. Today the extensive system of higher education also includes state universities at Dnipropetrovsk, Uzhhorod, and Donetsk.

      The largest single scientific organization is the Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. Founded in 1918 (when Ukraine was briefly an independent state), the academy grew as an institution of research and learning during the Soviet period. Following Soviet leader Joseph Stalin (Stalin, Joseph)'s purges of the 1930s, the academy's humanities and social science sections were mobilized to further the twin goals of Soviet social engineering and Russification, and they continued to follow this policy more or less until the demise of the Soviet Union. Today the academy governs a host of research institutions and scientific workers. Among the specialized scientific facilities available in Ukraine are a number of oceanographic research vessels, based in Odessa and Sevastopol, which support research in the fields of mineral resources, marine biology, and desalinization of seawater. Elsewhere in the country can be found a large cyclotron and one of the finest experimental nuclear reactors in the world, astronomical observatories, and botanical gardens.

Ihor Stebelsky Ivan Alekseyevich Yerofeyev Andrij Makuch

Cultural life

Cultural milieu
      Ukraine possesses a wealth of cultural talent and a considerable cultural legacy. Numerous writers have contributed to the country's rich literary history. Impressive monuments of architecture and museums displaying works by generations of Ukrainian artists can be found throughout the country, and art galleries featuring contemporary Ukrainian artists have become commonplace in larger urban centres. The country's strong tradition of folk art also continues to this day. In addition, high-calibre performing artists and ensembles appear regularly in Ukraine's numerous theatres and concert halls.

      Because of the country's geographical location, Ukrainian culture has been influenced by the cultures of both western Europe and Russia. Although these influences are particularly evident in the western and eastern halves of the country, respectively, there is no strict geographical division. For example, Russian is spoken in the streets and in many homes and institutions throughout the country; it also is used in national publications, radio broadcasts, and popular music. The country's other ethnic minorities contribute to a measure of cultural diversity as well.

Daily life and social customs
      The social changes brought about by Ukrainian independence are most evident in the cities, particularly Kiev. The country's capital now boasts high-end stores catering to a moneyed class, and a fashionable strip of contemporary art galleries and cafés winds its way down the historical street of Andriyivskyi Uzviz. The capital's renovated airport stands in striking contrast to its decidedly dour appearance in Soviet times.

      The cities, with their broad sidewalks and extensive greenery, are eminently suited for walking. Ukrainians generally do a considerable amount of walking, either to get around or simply for enjoyment. Parks are plentiful and popular for strolling or picnicking, a common pastime among city dwellers, most of whom live in apartments. The cities also feature numerous kiosks, which sell all manner of wares.

 Cultural pursuits and entertainment are widespread. Most of Ukraine's major cities have ornate theatres with their own opera or ballet companies. Song-and-dance ensembles, most notably the Verovka State Chorus and the Virsky Dance Ensemble, have made Ukrainian folk music and dance into an impressive stage art. Though classical music remains popular, contemporary Western-style music has expanded its audience considerably and now dominates the airwaves on numerous commercial radio stations. Street concerts and club performances are common, as are dance clubs and cabarets. Imported television soap operas have developed a dedicated following, and cinemas show American blockbusters.

      The country offers a variety of restaurants that serve Chinese, Greek, Continental, or other foreign cuisine. Pizza bars and other fast-food restaurants are increasingly common as well. Many Ukrainians, however, still prefer such traditional Ukrainian foods as borscht, cabbage rolls, varenyky (dumplings), studynets (a form of headcheese), and shashlyky (kebabs). On festive occasions these dishes are accompanied by vodka or champagne and eloquent toasts. The dish known as chicken Kiev, though commonly served in Ukraine, likely originated elsewhere.

      In the countryside, horse-drawn carts with rubber wheels have not quite disappeared. The khata (“house”), made of mud and thatch and typically whitewashed, is still found as well. These homes often contain such traditional handiwork as embroideries, weavings, and handmade feather duvets and oversized pillows. Their inhabitants are predominantly elderly Ukrainians.

Ihor Stebelsky Ivan Alekseyevich Yerofeyev Andrij Makuch

The arts
      Written Ukrainian literature began with Christianization and the introduction of Old Church Slavonic (Old Church Slavonic language) as a liturgical and literary language. The literary heritage of the Ukrainian people in the early period, from the 11th to the 13th centuries, is that of Kievan Rus; sermons, tales, and lives of the saints were the major genres. After the Mongol destruction of Kievan Rus in the 13th century, literary activity in Ukraine declined. A revival began in the 14th century and was spurred further in the 16th century with the introduction of printing, the Reformation ferment, and the advance of the Counter-Reformation into Polish-dominated Ukrainian lands.

      The Ukrainian vernacular (Ukrainian language) gradually became more prominent in writings in the 16th century, but this process was set back in the 17th and 18th centuries, when many Ukrainian authors wrote in Russian or Polish. At the end of the 18th century, modern literary Ukrainian finally emerged out of the colloquial Ukrainian tongue.

      Nineteenth-century Ukrainian writers greatly contributed to the reawakening of Ukrainian national consciousness under the Russian Empire. The classicist poet and playwright Ivan Kotlyarevsky (Kotlyarevsky, Ivan) may be considered the first modern Ukrainian author. In his work Eneyida (1798), he transformed the heroes of Virgil's Aeneid into Ukrainian Cossacks. Classicist prose appeared only with Hryhorii Kvitka-Osnovianenko's novel Marusya (1834).

      In the 1830s Ukrainian Romanticism developed, and such authors as Izmail Sreznevsky, Levko Borovykovsky, Amvrosii Metlynsky, and Mykola Kostomarov published works that recognized a particular Ukrainian culture and history. In western Ukraine, Markiian Shashkevych, Yakiv Holovatsky, and Ivan Vahylevych constituted the so-called “Ruthenian Triad” of Ukrainian Romanticism. A markedly different approach was taken by Nikolay Gogol (Gogol, Nikolay) (Ukrainian: Mykola Hohol), who wrote Romantic works with Ukrainian themes in Russian and with a “pan-Russian” spirit.

      The most important 19th-century Ukrainian poet, Taras Shevchenko (Shevchenko, Taras Hryhorovych), treated Ukrainian history and Russian oppression, as well as broader themes. Panteleymon Kulish was another significant poet of the period.

      Marko Vovchok, who wrote Narodni opovidannia (1857; “Tales of the People”), ushered in Ukrainian realism. Many Realist works depicted village life and contemporary society; some touched on populist themes. Panas Myrny, with his works on social injustice, became the major representative of Ukrainian Realism, but the novelists Ivan Nechuy-Levytsky and Ivan Franko (Franko, Ivan) were prominent as well.

      A number of competing literary movements emerged during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, though Realism, exemplified by the prose of Volodymyr Vynnychenko, remained important. Lesia Ukrainka (Ukrainka, Lesya) was a leading modernist author. The poet Pavlo Tychyna followed the Symbolist movement; Mykola Bazhan, one of Ukraine's greatest 20th-century poets, employed elements of Futurism; and Mykola Zerov, Maksym Rylsky, and Mykhaylo Dray-Khmara wrote Neoclassicist poetry (see Classicism and Neoclassicism).

      During the early years of Bolshevik rule, talented Ukrainian writers proliferated. Mykola Khvylovy's prose was imbued with revolutionary and national Romanticism, Hryhory Kosynka's prose was impressionistic, Yury Yanovsky's stories and novels were unabashedly romantic, and Valeriyan Pidmohylny's work adhered to the principles of realism.

      In 1932, however, the Communist Party began requiring writers to follow the theory of Socialist Realism. Many Ukrainian writers who did not adhere to the official style were imprisoned or executed, particularly during Stalin's purges of the 1930s. A new generation of writers, known as the “Writers of the '60s,” broke with Socialist Realism in the post-Stalinist period, but in the 1970s the Communist Party took new measures to repress literature that deviated from the approved style.

      With Ukraine's independence in 1991 came a rebirth of free literary expression. Many of the established literary journals continued to publish, although with far-more-open editorial policies, and a plethora of new journals appeared as well. Literary journals have provided a valuable outlet for the work of writers in Ukraine, particularly younger ones, as the postindependence economic difficulties substantially limited the publication of books, especially in the realm of belles lettres. Among the literary talents of independent Ukraine, novelist Valerii Shevchuk and poet Yury Andrukhovych stand out.

Oleksa Eliseyovich Zasenko Stepan Andriyovich Kryzhanivsky Andrij Makuch

      Over the centuries the Ukrainian (Ukraine) people have evolved a varied folk art. Embroidery, wood carving, ceramics, and weaving are highly developed, with stylized ornamentation that represents many regional styles. Intricately patterned Easter eggs (pysanky) have become popular in many countries that have Ukrainian immigrant populations.

      With the introduction of Christianity in the 10th century, the various forms of Byzantine art (e.g., architecture, mosaics, frescoes, manuscript illumination, and icon painting) spread rapidly and remained the dominant art forms through the 16th century. The mosaics and frescoes of the churches of Kiev, notably the cathedral of St. Sophia (11th–12th century), and the icons of the more distinctively Ukrainian school in Galicia (15th–16th century) are particularly noteworthy. A number of outstanding churches of this period, notably the cathedral of St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery (early 12th century), were demolished by the Soviet authorities in the 1930s; only international protests saved the cathedral of St. Sophia from the same fate.

      Baroque (Baroque period) architecture had a pronounced impact in Ukraine, and a distinctive “Cossack Baroque” style developed there. Western European influences in the 17th and 18th centuries also affected iconography and stimulated portrait painting, engraving, and sculpture.

      Western trends were carried to Russia by Ukrainian artists working there from the 18th century. During the late 18th and early 19th centuries the Ukrainian-born sculptor and rector of the St. Petersburg Academy of Arts, Ivan Martos, and the Ukrainian-born portraitists Dmytro Levytsky and Volodymyr Borovykovsky were among the leading figures of the St. Petersburg Classical school of painting.

      The classicism (Classicism and Neoclassicism) and the emergent realism of the 19th century are best exemplified by the poet-painter Taras Shevchenko. New art movements are evident in the work of such 19th-century painters as the Impressionists Ivan Trush, Mykola Burachek, and Aleksander Murashko; the Post-Impressionist Mykola Hlushchenko; and the Expressionists Oleksander Novakivsky, Alexis Gritchenko (Ukrainian: Oleksa Hryshchenko), and Anatoly Petrytsky (see Impressionism; Post-Impressionism; Expressionism).

      The brief renewal of Ukrainian independence in 1918 further fostered avant-garde trends that reflected a resurgence of Ukrainian national traditions. Two schools developed: in painting, the Monumentalism of Mykhaylo Boychuk, Ivan Padalka, and Vasyl Sedliar, consisting of a blend of Ukrainian Byzantine and Early Renaissance styles; and, in the graphic arts, the Neo-Baroque of Heorhii Narbut. Modernist experimentation ended in Soviet Ukraine in the 1930s, however, when both these schools were suppressed and Socialist Realism became the only officially permitted style.

      The Ukrainian avant-garde was rejuvenated following Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev (Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeyevich)'s de-Stalinization campaigns of the late 1950s; it consisted mostly of Expressionists (Expressionism) who wanted to illustrate Ukraine's tragic modern history. These artists, who included Alla Horska, Opanas Zalyvakha, and Feodosy Humenyuk, were again suppressed by the Soviet authorities in the 1970s and '80s.

      A number of Ukrainian artists have won considerable renown in the West, among them Gritchenko, who began with Cubism and then turned to a dynamic form of Expressionism, and the painter and engraver Jacques Hnizdovsky, who developed a simplified style of realism. The sculptor Alexander Archipenko (Archipenko, Alexander) (Ukrainian: Oleksander Arkhypenko), one of the pioneers of Cubism who later experimented in Constructivism and Expressionism, was a major figure of 20th-century European art.

       folk music in Ukraine retains great vitality to this day. Ritual songs, ballads, and historical songs (dumy) were sung a cappella or accompanied by folk instruments, of which the bandura (a multistringed lutelike instrument) is the most popular. Itinerant blind musicians known as kobzars or lirnyks (depending on their instrument of choice) were a common feature of the Ukrainian countryside until the 20th century.

      Church music was patterned on Byzantine and Bulgarian models with local variations evolving in Kiev in the early period. Polyphonic singing had developed by the 16th century and subsequently was transmitted in the 17th century to Russia, where Ukrainian singers and musical culture soon won a dominant position. The 17th-century composer Mykola Dyletsky introduced soprano singers to church choirs and emphasized emotional expression in his compositions. Ukrainian choral music reached its peak in the 18th and early 19th centuries in the works of Maksym Berezovsky, Dmytro Bortnyansky, and Artem Vedel.

      Secular music became ascendant in the 19th century. The opera Zaporozhets za Dunayem (1863; “A Zaporozhian [Cossack] Beyond the Danube”) by Semen Hulak-Artemovsky gained great popularity, as did Kateryna by Mykola Arkas and the compositions of Petro Nishchynsky and Mykhaylo Verbytsky. At the turn of the 20th century, Ukrainian musical life was dominated by Mykola Lysenko, whose output encompassed vocal and choral settings, piano compositions, and operas, including Natalka Poltavka, Utoplena (“The Drowned Girl”), and Taras Bulba. Other major composers of the period were Kyrylo Stetsenko, Yakiv Stepovy, and Mykola Leontovych, the latter excelling in polyphonic arrangements of ancient folk music.

      In the early years of the Soviet period, several composers produced works of high artistic merit, particularly Lev Revutsky and Borys Lyatoshynsky and their contemporary in western Ukraine, Stanyslav Lyudkevych. From the mid-1930s, however, political regimentation dampened individual expression and innovation in musical language. Typical among composers of Soviet Ukraine were Kostyantyn Dankevych, Yuly Meytus, and the brothers Yury and Platon Mayboroda. An innovative group of modernist musicians, known as the Kiev Avant-garde, emerged as a musical force in the 1970s and '80s. The best-known composer of the group was Valentyn Sylvestrov, who composed in the postindependence period as well.

      Popular music grew in importance during the last three decades of the 20th century. The songs of popular composer Volodymyr Ivasiuk, as performed by the chanteuse Sofiya Rotaru, received wide applause. A form of popular music known as estrada (stage entertainment) also grew in popularity. Stage ensembles generally maintained a Europop sound. In the 1980s the Braty Hadiukiny (“Snake Brothers”) band started incorporating a broader range of contemporary influences into their music. By the 1990s rock, ska, punk, and other popular musical styles were commonplace in Ukraine.

Theatre and motion pictures
      The theatre originated in Ukraine under Western influence in the 17th century. Verse dialogue (intermedia) rapidly developed into a specific genre, the school theatre, whose repertoire expanded to encompass dramatization of Christian legends, historical drama, and puppet theatre (vertep) performed on a stage of two levels. The best example of the Cossack Baroque theatre was the historical play Vladimir (1705) by Feofan Prokopovich (Prokopovich, Feofan) (Ukrainian: Teofan Prokopovych (Prokopovich, Feofan)). After a period of decline, a Ukrainian ethnographic theatre developed in the 19th century. Folk plays and vaudeville were raised to a high level of artistry by such actors as Mykola Sadovsky and Mariia Zankovetska in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. A lifting of censorship in 1905 permitted a significant expansion of the repertoire to include modern dramas by Lesia (Ukrainka, Lesya) Ukrainka (who introduced to the Ukrainian stage both ancient Greek and Shakespearian techniques), Volodymyr Vynnychenko, and Oleksander Oles (an innovator in symbolic plays), as well as translated plays.

      The real flowering of the Ukrainian theatre occurred between 1917 and 1933. The Berezil Theatre (1922–33) in Kharkiv, under the artistic director Les Kurbas, was the most distinguished troupe. Preeminent among the playwrights was Mykola Kulish, whose Patetychna Sonata (“Sonata Pathétique”) combined Expressionist techniques with the forms of the Ukrainian vertep. From the mid-1930s, however, the theatre in Ukraine was dominated by Socialist Realism, the style enforced by the Communist Party. Oleksander Korniychuk was the most favoured of the playwrights writing in the approved manner.

      Ukrainian film has achieved some marked successes. The director and scenarist Aleksandr Dovzhenko (Dovzhenko, Aleksandr) (Ukrainian: Oleksander Dovzhenko (Dovzhenko, Aleksandr)) was an important innovator in world cinematography. Several of his works produced in the 1920s and '30s are considered classics of the silent film era. In later years, Tini zabutykh predkiv (1964; Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors) won critical acclaim in the West. The Ukrainian motion picture industry is centred in Kiev and Odessa.

Cultural institutions
      There are numerous professional theatres in Ukraine, notably the Ivan Franko Theatre in Kiev and the Mariia Zankovetska Theatre in Lviv. Ukraine also has several opera theatres, numerous symphony orchestras, academic and folk choirs, and other performing ensembles. Amateur groups of song and dance are very popular as well.

      The Shevchenko Scientific Society, established in 1873, was the main Ukrainian scholarly body in western Ukraine until it was forcibly dissolved in 1940, after the Soviet Union occupied the region. It reestablished itself in western Europe and the United States in 1947, and in 1989 the society resumed operations in Ukraine. Among its many activities, the society sponsors conferences and lectures, awards research grants, and publishes scholarly works, particularly in the field of Ukrainian studies.

Sports and recreation
      Ukraine benefited immensely from the Soviet emphasis on sports and physical education, which left the country with hundreds of stadiums, swimming pools, gymnasiums, and other athletic facilities. Popular sports include track and field, volleyball, shooting, basketball, swimming, and gymnastics. Football (soccer), however, is by far the favourite sport, with Dynamo Kiev being the country's preeminent team. Chess is also considered a sport.

 Ukrainian athletes excelled in international competitions while representing the U.S.S.R. Since independence, Ukraine has fielded its own Olympic teams, featuring such notable gold medal winners as figure skater Oksana Baiul, heavyweight boxer Wladimir Klitschko (Ukrainian: Volodymyr Klichko), weightlifter Timur Taimazov, gymnast Liliya Podkopayeva, and swimmer Yana Klochkova (Klochkova, Yana).

      The country has several national parks, including the Carpathian National Park and the Shatskyy National Park. Forest parks, located near major cities, offer picnicking, swimming, hiking, and cross-country skiing. Some of the larger cities have urban “culture and recreation” parks, where theatres, lecture halls, reading rooms, and playgrounds are found amid gardens and wooded areas. Near the city of Yalta is located the Nikitsky Botanical Garden, in which plants from almost every country in the world are found.

      In Transcarpathia and near the cities of Lviv, Vinnytsya, Zhytomyr, Bila Tserkva, Poltava, and Kharkiv are health spas (spa) noted for their mineral springs. Spas near the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov specialize in mud baths.

Media and publishing
      The demise of the Soviet Union brought fundamental changes to publishing and broadcasting in Ukraine. The Communist Party's influence was no longer a factor, and state control—and funding—receded. As a result, many established newspapers and journals ceased publication. The print runs of those that did continue, as private ventures, were in general considerably smaller. At the same time, numerous new publications and private television and radio stations emerged during the 1990s. Although Soviet-era restrictions on content were lifted, publications that are critical of the local or national administration have been subjected to various forms of harassment—for example, tax inspections, detailed examinations of registration documents, or libel suits of dubious credibility. In addition, state broadcasters occasionally have provided slanted coverage of political events. On the whole, however, the media remain much more open and credible than they were in Soviet times.

      The official news agency is the Ukrainian National Information Agency, which covers political, economic, cultural, and sports information. Independent news agencies include Respublika (UNIAR), the Ukrainian Press Agency, and the Rukh Press, affiliated with the Rukh political party.

      Official publications include the Supreme Council's Holos Ukrainy (“Voice of Ukraine”) and the cabinet's Uryadovy Kur'yer (“Administrative Courier”). The largest newspapers (usually publishing three to five times a week) include Silski Visti (“Rural News”), a former organ of the Communist Party; Robitnycha Hazeta (“Workers' Gazette”); Segodnya (“Today”); Molod' Ukrainy (“Youth of Ukraine”), formerly a Komsomol publication; Vysoky Zamok (“High Castle”) in Lviv; and Donbass (“The Donbas”) in Donetsk. Other noteworthy periodicals include Den' (“The Day”), which publishes editions in Ukrainian, Russian, and English; the influential Zerkalo Nedeli (“Weekly Mirror”); the English-language Kyiv Post; the weekly journal Polityka i Kul'tura (“Politics and Culture”); and the high-calibre literary and cultural review Krytyka (“Critique”).

      The Ukrainian government controls major television and radio broadcasting companies. These broadcast in Ukrainian and Russian; they also broadcast outside the country in English, German, and Romanian. There is a separate state-run television and radio company in the Crimea as well. Apart from the state-run networks, a host of privately owned television channels and radio stations operate in the country. Most commercial radio stations are local or regional in nature and usually feature a contemporary music and talk format.

Lubomyr A. Hajda Andrij Makuch

History

Prehistory
      From prehistoric times, migration and settlement patterns in the territories of present-day Ukraine varied fundamentally along the lines of three geographic zones. The Black Sea coast was for centuries in the sphere of the contemporary Mediterranean (Mediterranean Sea) maritime powers. The open steppe (Steppe, the), funneling from the east across southern Ukraine and toward the mouth of the Danube River, formed a natural gateway to Europe for successive waves of nomadic horsemen from Central Asia. And the mixed forest-steppe and forest belt of north-central and western Ukraine supported an agricultural population (most notably the Trypillya (Trypillya culture) culture of the mid-5th to 3rd millennia BC), linked by waterways to northern and central Europe. The marshlands of these zones were frequent areas of both military conflict and cultural transmission.

 Beginning in the 7th–6th centuries BC, numerous Greek (ancient Greek civilization) colonies were founded on the northern coast of the Black Sea, in the Crimea (Crimean Peninsula), and along the Sea of Azov (Azov, Sea of); these Hellenic outposts later came under the hegemony of the Roman Empire (see ancient Greek civilization; ancient Rome). During the 1st millennium BC the steppe hinterland was occupied successively by the Cimmerians (Cimmerian), Scythians (Scythian), and Sarmatians (Sarmatian). These peoples, all of Iranian stock, maintained commercial and cultural relations with the Greek colonies.

      A period of great migrations (human migration) began with the descent of the Goths (Goth) from the Baltic (Baltic Sea) region into Ukraine about AD 200. They displaced the Sarmatians, but their own power was broken about 375 by the invading Huns (Hun) from the east, who were followed in the 5th–6th centuries by the Bulgars (Bulgar) and Avars (Avar). Between the 7th and 9th centuries, the Ukrainian steppe formed part of the Turkic Khazar mercantile empire, which was centred on the lower Volga River. Khazar control of the steppe was breached in the late 9th century by the Magyars (Hungarian) (Hungarians (Hungarian)). The Pechenegs, who followed, dominated much of southern Ukraine in the 10th and 11th centuries, and they were in turn succeeded by the Polovtsians (Cumans (Cuman)). Throughout this period of nomadic invasions, only a few of the Greek settlements in the Crimea, notably Chersonesus (see Tauric Chersonese (Chersonese, Tauric)), maintained a precarious existence, relying on the support of the Byzantine Empire.

      In the meantime, under the impact of Germanic migrations, the movement of Slavic (Slav) tribes from their primordial homeland north of the Carpathians (Carpathian Mountains) began in the 5th and 6th centuries. While some Slavs (Slav) migrated westward and others south into the Balkans, the East Slavs occupied the forest and forest-steppe regions of what are now western and north-central Ukraine and southern Belarus; they expanded farther north and to the northeast into territories of the future Russian state centred on Moscow. The East Slavs practiced agriculture and animal husbandry, engaged in such domestic industries as cloth making and ceramics, and built fortified settlements, many of which later developed into important commercial and political centres. Among such early settlements was Kiev (Kyiv), on the high right (western) bank of the Dnieper River.

Kievan Rus
      The formation of the Kievan state that began in the mid-9th century, the role of the Varangians (Viking) (Vikings (Viking)) in this process, and the name Rus by which this state came to be known are all matters of controversy among historians. It is clear, however, that this formation was connected with developments in international trade and the new prominence of the Dnieper (Dnieper River) route from the Baltic to Byzantium, on which Kiev was strategically sited. Trade along this route was controlled by Varangian merchant-warriors, and from their ranks came the progenitors of the Kievan princes, who were, however, soon Slavicized. In the early chronicles the Varangians were also called Rus, and this corporate name became a territorial designation for the Kievan region—the basic territory of the Rus; later, by extension, it was applied to the entire territory ruled by members of the Kievan dynasty.

      By the end of the 10th century, the Kievan domain covered a vast area from the edge of the open steppe in Ukraine as far north as Lake Ladoga (Ladoga, Lake) and the upper Volga basin. Like other medieval states, it did not develop central political institutions but remained a loose aggregation of principalities ruling what was a dynastic clan enterprise. Kiev reached its apogee in the reigns of Volodymyr the Great ( Vladimir I) and his son Yaroslav I (the Wise). In 988 Volodymyr adopted Christianity as the religion of his realm and had the inhabitants of Kiev baptized. Rus entered the orbit of Byzantine (later, Orthodox) Christianity and culture. A church hierarchy was established, headed (at least since 1037) by the metropolitan of Kiev, who was usually appointed by the patriarch of Constantinople. With the new religion came new forms of architecture, art, and music, a written language (Old Church Slavonic (Old Church Slavonic language)), and the beginnings of a literary culture. All these were vigorously promoted by Yaroslav, who also promulgated a code of laws, the first in Slavdom. Although Byzantium and the steppe remained his main preoccupations in external policy, Yaroslav maintained friendly relations with European rulers, with whom he established marital alliances for his progeny.

      Following Yaroslav's death, Kiev entered a long period of decline, only briefly stemmed in the 12th century under Volodymyr II Monomakh (Vladimir II Monomakh) ( Vladimir II Monomakh). Shifts in trade routes undermined Kiev's economic importance, while warfare with the Polovtsians (Kipchak) in the steppe sapped its wealth and energies. Succession struggles and princely rivalries eroded Kiev's political hegemony. The ascendancy of new centres and the clustering of principalities around them reflected regional cleavages—historical, economic, and tribal ethnic—that had persisted even in the period of Kiev's predominance. These differences were accentuated by the Mongol- Tatar invasions that began in the 1220s and culminated in the devastating sack of Kiev in 1240.

      The territory that largely coincides with modern Belarus, with Polotsk as the most important centre, was one such emerging region. The land of Novgorod to its north was another. In the northeast, Vladimir- Suzdal (and later Moscow) formed the core from which developed the future Russian state (see also Grand Principality of Moscow (Moscow, Grand Principality of)). On Ukrainian territory, in the southwestern part of Rus, Galicia-Volhynia emerged as the leading principality.

      Volodymyr (modern Volodymyr-Volynskyy) in Volhynia had been an important princely seat in Kievan Rus; and Galicia, with its seat at Halych, on the Dniester River, became a principality in the 12th century. In 1199 the two principalities were united by Prince Roman Mstyslavych to form a powerful and rich state that at times included the domains of Kiev. Galicia-Volhynia reached its highest eminence under Roman's son Danylo (Daniel Romanovich) ( Daniel Romanovich). New cities were founded, most importantly Lviv; trade—especially with Poland and Hungary, as well as Byzantium (Byzantine Empire)—brought considerable prosperity; and culture flourished, with marked new influences from the West. In 1253 Danylo (in a bid for aid from the West) even accepted the royal crown from Pope Innocent IV and recognized him as head of the church, although nothing substantial came from this. Danylo's reign also witnessed the rise of boyar-magnate unrest, debilitating dynastic involvements with Poland and Hungary, and the Mongol invasion of 1240–41. These marked the onset of Galicia-Volhynia's decline, which continued until the extinction of Roman's dynasty in 1340.

Lithuanian and Polish rule
      By the middle of the 14th century, Ukrainian territories were under the rule of three external powers—the Golden Horde, the grand duchy of Lithuania (Lithuania, grand duchy of), and the kingdom of Poland.

      The steppe and the Crimea (Crimean Peninsula), whose coastal towns and maritime trade were now in the hands of the Venetians and Genoese, formed part of the direct domains of the Tatar Golden Horde. This was the westernmost successor of Genghis Khan's Mongol empire, whose khan resided at Sarai on the Volga River. By the mid-15th century the Golden Horde was in a process of disintegration. One of its successor states was the Crimean khanate (Crimea, khanate of the), which after 1475 accepted the suzerainty of the sultans of the Ottoman Empire. Both the Crimean Peninsula and large areas of the adjoining steppe continued under the khanate's rule until its annexation to the Russian Empire in 1783.

      Elsewhere in Ukraine, Mongol rule was largely indirect, limited to exactions of taxes and tribute whose collection was delegated to the local princes. It was also relatively short-lived; northwestern and central Ukraine became an arena of expansion for a new power that had arisen in the 13th century, the grand duchy of Lithuania (Lithuania, grand duchy of).

      Having already over the course of a century incorporated all the lands of Belarus, Lithuania under Grand Duke Algirdas advanced rapidly into Ukraine. In the 1350s Chernihiv and adjacent areas—and in the 1360s the regions of Kiev and, to its south, Pereyaslav (Pereyaslav-Khmelnytskyy) and Podolia (Podillya)—were occupied by Lithuania. Competition with Poland over the former Galician-Volhynian principality ended in the 1380s in partition, by which Lithuania gained Volhynia and Poland was confirmed in its possession of Galicia. Thus, Lithuanian control extended over virtually all the Ukrainian lands as far as the open steppe and even, briefly, to the Black Sea.

      Within the grand duchy the Ruthenian (Ukrainian and Belarusian) lands initially retained considerable autonomy. The pagan Lithuanians themselves were increasingly converting to Orthodoxy and assimilating into Ruthenian culture. The grand duchy's administrative practices and legal system drew heavily on Slavic customs, and an official Ruthenian state language (also known as Rusyn) developed over time from the language used in Rus.

      Direct Polish rule in Ukraine in the 1340s and for two centuries thereafter was limited to Galicia. There, changes in such areas as administration, law, and land tenure proceeded more rapidly than in Ukrainian territories under Lithuania. However, Lithuania itself was soon drawn into the orbit of Poland following the dynastic linkage of the two states in 1385/86 and the baptism of the Lithuanians into the Latin (Roman Catholic) church. The spread of Catholicism among the Lithuanians and the attendant diffusion of the Polish language, culture, and notions of political and social order among the Lithuanian nobility eroded the position of the Orthodox (Eastern Orthodoxy) Ruthenians, as had happened earlier in Galicia. In 1569, by the Union of Lublin (Lublin, Union of), the dynastic link between Poland and Lithuania was transformed into a constitutional union of the two states as the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. At the same time, the greater part of the Ukrainian territories was detached from Lithuania and annexed directly to Poland. This act hastened the differentiation of Ukrainians and Belarusians (the latter of whom remained within the grand duchy) and, by eliminating the political frontier between them, promoted the closer integration of Galicia and the eastern Ukrainian lands. For the next century, virtually all ethnically Ukrainian lands experienced in common the direct impact of Polish political and cultural predominance.

Social changes
      Over three centuries of Lithuanian and Polish rule, Ukraine by the middle of the 17th century had undergone substantial social evolution. The princely and boyar families tracing their roots to Kievan Rus had largely merged and become part of the privileged noble (aristocracy) estate of Lithuania and Poland. Long attached to the Orthodox religion and the Ruthenian language and customs, the Ruthenian nobility in the late 16th century became increasingly prone to Polonization, a process often initiated by education in Jesuit schools and conversion to Roman Catholicism.

      With the growth of towns and urban (urbanization) trades, especially in western Ukraine, the burghers (bourgeoisie) became an important social stratum. They were divided both in terms of an internal social hierarchy associated with the guild system and by religion and ethnicity. Since the 13th century many Poles, Armenians, Germans, and Jews (Jew) had settled in the cities and towns, where the Ukrainians were often reduced to a minority. Although the burghers came to play an influential role within the Ukrainian community, legal disabilities imposed on non-Catholics progressively limited their participation in the municipal self-government enjoyed by many cities and towns under Magdeburg Law.

      In the period of Polish rule the conditions of the peasantry (peasant) steadily deteriorated. The free peasantry that had still existed into the late Lithuanian period underwent rapid enserfment (serfdom), while serf obligations themselves became more onerous (see serfdom). Peasant unrest increased toward the end of the 16th century, especially in eastern Ukraine. The sparsely settled lands were opened to Polish proprietorship for the first time, and large latifundia (agricultural estates worked by a large number of peasants) were established through royal grants to meet the demands for grain on the European markets. To attract labour to the new estates, peasants were granted temporary exemptions from serf obligations; the expiration of these exemptions and the reintroduction of servitude among a population grown accustomed to freedom led to much discontent and peasant flight into the “wild fields”—the steppe lands to the east and south. Tensions were exacerbated by the fact that, while the peasants were Ukrainian and Orthodox, the landlords were largely Polish (or Polonized) and Roman Catholic, and the estate stewards or leaseholders for absentee proprietors frequently were Jewish. Thus, social discontent tended to coalesce with national and religious grievances.

Religious developments
      As social conditions among the Ukrainian (Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church) population in Lithuania and Poland progressively deteriorated, so did the situation of the Ruthenian church. The Roman Catholic Church, steadily expanding eastward into Ukraine, enjoyed the support of the state and legal superiority over the Orthodox. External pressures and restrictions were accompanied by a serious internal decline in the Ruthenian church. From the mid-16th century, both Catholicism, newly reinvigorated by the Counter-Reformation and the arrival of Jesuits in Poland, and Protestantism (albeit temporarily) made inroads, especially among the Ruthenian nobility.

      Attempts to revive the fortunes of the Ruthenian church gathered strength in the last decades of the 16th century. About 1580 Prince Konstantyn Ostrozky founded at Ostroh in Volhynia a cultural centre that included an academy and a printing press and attracted leading scholars of the day; among its major achievements was the publication of the first complete text of the Bible (biblical translation) in Slavonic. Lay brotherhoods, established by burghers in Lviv and other cities, maintained churches, supported schools and printing presses, and promoted charitable activities. The brotherhoods were frequently in conflict with the Orthodox hierarchy, however, on questions of authority over their institutions and clerical reforms.

      Religious developments took a radical turn in 1596 when, at a synod in Brest, the Kievan metropolitan and the majority of bishops signed an act of union with Rome. By this act the Ruthenian church recognized papal primacy but retained the Eastern rite and the Slavonic liturgical language, as well as its administrative autonomy and traditional discipline, including a married clergy.

      This so-called Uniate church (Eastern rite church) was unsuccessful in gaining the legal equality with the Latin church foreseen by the agreement. Nor was it able to stem the process of Polonization and Latinization of the nobility. At the same time, the Union of Brest-Litovsk (Brest-Litovsk, Union of) caused a deep split in the Ruthenian church and society. This was reflected in a sizable polemical literature, struggles over the control of bishoprics and church properties that intensified after the restoration of an Orthodox hierarchy in 1620, and numerous acts of violence. Efforts to heal the breach in the 1620s and '30s were ultimately fruitless. (See also Eastern rite church.)

The Cossacks (Cossack)
      In the 15th century a new martial society—the Cossacks (Cossack) (from the Turkic kazak, meaning “adventurer” or “free man”)—was beginning to evolve in Ukraine's southern steppe frontier. The term was applied initially to venturesome men who entered the steppe seasonally for hunting, fishing, and the gathering of honey. Their numbers were continually augmented by peasants fleeing serfdom and adventurers from other social strata, including the nobility. Banding together for mutual protection, the Cossacks by the mid-16th century had developed a military organization of a peculiarly democratic kind, with a general assembly (rada) as the supreme authority and elected officers, including the commander in chief, or hetman. Their centre was the Sich, an armed camp in the lands of the lower Dnieper “beyond the rapids” (za porohy)—hence, Zaporozhia (in contemporary usage, Zaporizhzhya).

      The Cossacks defended Ukraine's frontier population from Tatar incursions, conducted their own campaigns into Crimean territory, and, in their flotillas of light craft, even raided Turkish coastal cities in Anatolia. The Polish government found the Cossacks a useful fighting force in wars with the Tatars, Turks, and Muscovites but in peacetime viewed them as a dangerously volatile element. Attempts to control them institutionally and to limit their numbers through an official register created serious discontent among the Cossacks, who increasingly perceived themselves as forming a distinct estate with inherent rights and liberties. Sporadically over a half century starting in 1591, the Cossacks rose up in revolts that were put down only with great difficulty.

      In the first half of the 17th century, the Cossacks also became involved in the raging religious conflict. In 1620 the entire Zaporozhian host joined the Kievan Orthodox brotherhood; in the same year, a new Orthodox hierarchy was consecrated in Kiev under their military protection. Thus, in the great religious divide, the Cossacks became identified with staunch support of Orthodoxy and uncompromising opposition to the Uniate church. Under the protection afforded by the Cossacks and the dynamic leadership of a new metropolitan of Kiev, Peter Mogila (Mogila, Peter) (Ukrainian: Petro Mohyla), Orthodoxy flourished in Ukraine; it became the driving force behind a cultural revival that included the establishment of the Kievan Mohyla Academy, the first Ukrainian institution of higher learning.

The Khmelnytsky insurrection
      Tensions stemming from social discontent, religious strife, and Cossack resentment of Polish authority finally coalesced and came to a head in 1648. Beginning with a seemingly typical Cossack revolt, under the leadership of Bohdan Khmelnytsky (Khmelnytsky, Bohdan), Ukraine was quickly engulfed in an unprecedented war and revolution.

      Khmelnytsky was a petty nobleman and Cossack officer who, unable to obtain justice for wrongs suffered at Polish hands, fled to the Sich in late 1647 and was soon elected hetman. In early 1648 he began preparations for an insurrection, securing for this purpose Tatar military support. A Polish army sent into Ukraine to forestall the rebellion was shattered in two battles in May. This victory gave signal to a massive popular uprising. Violence spread throughout Ukraine as Cossacks and peasants vented their fury on those they associated with Polish tyranny and social oppression—landlords, officials, Latin and Uniate clergy, and Jews. The Poles in turn took bloody reprisals against the rebellious population. In September Khmelnytsky inflicted another crushing defeat on a newly raised Polish army, marched westward through Galicia, and finally besieged Zamość in Poland proper. He did not press his advantage, however, and, with the election of a new Polish king in November, he returned to central Ukraine. In January 1649 Khmelnytsky entered Kiev to triumphal acclaim as liberator.

      Although initially seeking only a redress of grievances from the Polish crown, Khmelnytsky, following his arrival in Kiev, began to conceive of Ukraine as an independent Cossack state. He set about establishing a system of government and state finances, created a local administration under a new governing elite drawn from the Cossack officers, and initiated relations with foreign states. Still prepared to recognize royal sovereignty, however, he entered into negotiations with the Poles. But neither the Treaty of Zboriv (August 1649) nor a less favourable agreement two years later proved acceptable—either to the Polish nobility or to the Cossack rank and file and the radicalized masses on the Ukrainian side.

      While military operations continued inconclusively, and because Tatar support proved undependable at crucial moments, Khmelnytsky began to search for other allies. In 1654 at Pereyaslav (Pereyaslav Agreement) he concluded with Moscow (Moscow, Grand Principality of) an agreement whose precise nature has generated enormous controversy: Russian historians have emphasized Ukraine's acceptance of the tsar's suzerainty, which subsequently legitimized Russian rule, but Ukrainian historiography has stressed Moscow's recognition of Ukraine's autonomy (including an elective hetmancy, self-government, and the right to conduct foreign relations) that was virtually tantamount to independence (see Pereyaslav Agreement). Moscow now entered the war against Poland. No decisive breakthrough occurred, however, despite occasional joint victories, and Khmelnytsky became increasingly disillusioned with the Muscovite alliance. There were disputes over control of conquered territory in Belarus and conflicts over Russian interference in internal Ukrainian affairs. Especially galling to the hetman was the Russo-Polish rapprochement that followed the invasion (Northern War, First) in 1655 of Poland by Sweden, Moscow's adversary but Ukraine's potential ally (see First Northern War (Northern War, First)). Khmelnytsky again cast about for new alliances and coalitions involving Sweden, Transylvania, Brandenburg, Moldavia, and Walachia, and there were indications that the hetman planned to sever the Muscovite connection when he died in 1657.

The Ruin
      Khmelnytsky's successor, Hetman Ivan Vyhovsky, broke with Moscow and in 1658 concluded the new Treaty of Hadyach with Poland. By its terms, central Ukraine (attempts to include Volhynia and Galicia were unsuccessful) was to constitute—under the hetman and a ruling elite of nobles and officers—the self-governing grand duchy of Rus, joined with Poland and Lithuania as an equal member of a tripartite commonwealth. Distasteful to the Polish magnates for its concessions to the hated Cossacks, repugnant to the Cossacks and the peasant masses for its conservative social cast and Polish connection, and a provocation to Moscow, the Treaty of Hadyach was never implemented. Faced with mounting opposition, Vyhovsky resigned the hetmancy and fled to Poland.

      After Vyhovsky, Ukraine began a rapid descent into a prolonged state of chaos that contemporaries called “the Ruin.” Tensions increased between the Cossack officers, who were undergoing a transformation into a hereditary landowning class, and rank-and-file Cossacks and the peasantry, who were the expected supply of labour. From 1663, rival hetmans rose and fell in the competing Polish and Russian spheres of influence. In 1667, by the Truce of Andrusovo (Andrusovo, Truce of), Ukraine was partitioned along the Dnieper River: (Dnieper River) the west, known as the Right Bank, reverted to Poland, while Russia was confirmed in its possession of the east, known as the Left Bank, together with Kiev (which actually was located west of the river); the arrangement was confirmed in 1686 by the Treaty of Eternal Peace between Poland and Russia.

      The partition of Ukraine caused a patriotic reaction. The hetman of the Right Bank, Petro Doroshenko, briefly occupied the Left Bank and sought to re-create a unified Ukrainian state under the vassalage of the Ottoman Empire. A massive Ottoman military intervention in 1672 had as its primary effect the outright annexation of Podolia as an Ottoman province for a quarter century. Doroshenko's hopes—and popularity—evaporated as further Ottoman operations failed to establish his rule and led to devastation, especially after Russia was drawn into the war. Mass flight of the populace to the Left Bank, and even beyond, depopulated large tracts of Right Bank Ukraine. Two large-scale Ottoman campaigns followed Doroshenko's abdication, but a truce in 1681 put an end to further direct Turkish military involvement. Ottoman power was soon on the wane in Europe, and in 1699 the province of Podolia reverted to Polish rule.

The autonomous hetman state and Sloboda Ukraine
      After the partition of 1667, the autonomous hetman state, or Hetmanate, was limited territorially to the east, in Left Bank Ukraine. (The hetman state in Right Bank Ukraine, under at least nominal Polish control, was abolished by the Poles at the turn of the 18th century.) At the head of the state stood the hetman, elected theoretically by a general Cossack assembly but in effect by senior officers, who in turn were largely swayed by the tsar's preference. The terms of autonomy were renegotiated at each election of a new hetman, and this led over time to a steady erosion of his prerogatives. Nevertheless, for a century the Hetmanate enjoyed a large measure of self-government, as well as considerable economic and cultural development.

      The ruling elite in the Hetmanate was composed of the senior Cossack officers, starshyna, who had evolved into a hereditary class approximating the Polish nobility in its privileges. The common Cossacks too were undergoing stratification, the more impoverished hardly distinguished, except in legal status, from the peasantry. The conditions of the free peasantry worsened over time, their growing obligations tending increasingly toward serfdom. Urban life flourished, however, and the larger cities and some towns continued to enjoy municipal self-government; the burghers largely maintained the rights of their social estate.

      In the ecclesiastical realm, the Uniate church disappeared from the Cossack-controlled territory, and the Orthodox (Eastern Orthodoxy) Kievan metropolitanate itself was transferred in 1686 from the patriarchal authority of Constantinople to that of Moscow. Although Ukrainian churchmen eventually gained enormous influence in Russia, within the Hetmanate itself in the course of the 18th century the church progressively lost its traditional autonomy and distinctive Ukrainian character.

      The hetman state reached its zenith in the hetmancy of Ivan Mazepa (Mazepa, Ivan). Relying at first on the support of Tsar Peter I (the Great), Mazepa exercised near monarchical powers in the Hetmanate. Literature, art, and architecture in the distinctive Cossack Baroque style flourished under his patronage, and the Kievan Mohyla Academy experienced its golden age. Mazepa aspired to annex the Right Bank and re-create a united Ukrainian state, initially still under the tsar's sovereignty. But Peter's centralizing reforms and the exactions imposed on the Hetmanate in connection with the Second Northern War (Northern War, Second) appeared to threaten Ukrainian autonomy. In 1708, in furtherance of his plans for independence, Mazepa made a secret alliance with Charles XII of Sweden, but in the decisive Battle of Poltava (Poltava, Battle of) (1709) their allied forces were defeated. Mazepa fled to Moldavia, where he died shortly thereafter.

      Although Peter allowed the election of a successor to Mazepa, the Hetmanate's autonomous prerogatives were severely curtailed and underwent further weakening over the remaining decades of the 18th century. From 1722 to 1727 and again from 1734 to 1750, the office of hetman was in abeyance, as the Russian imperial regime introduced new institutions to oversee the country's governance. In 1750 Empress Elizabeth revived the hetmancy for Kyrylo Rozumovsky, the brother of her favourite. On the accession of Catherine II (the Great) in 1762, the hetman and the starshyna petitioned for the restoration of the Hetmanate's previous status; instead, in 1764 Catherine forced Rozumovsky's resignation. Over the next 20 years all vestiges of Ukrainian autonomy were eliminated, and in 1775 the Zaporozhian Sich, the bastion of the Cossacks, was destroyed by Russian troops.

      To the east of the Hetmanate lay lands that until the 17th century had remained largely unpopulated—part of the “wild fields” since the Mongol invasion. Into this area, starting in the late 16th century, the Muscovite government gradually extended its line of fortifications against the Tatars. In the 17th century this territory became an area of colonization by Ukrainian peasants and Cossacks fleeing Polish rule and, later, the ravages of the Ruin period. The newcomers established free, nonserf settlements called slobodas that gave the area the name of Sloboda Ukraine. Kharkiv developed into the region's main centre. Like the Hetmanate, Sloboda Ukraine enjoyed extensive internal autonomy, though under officials appointed by the Russian imperial government. The autonomy of Sloboda Ukraine was abolished under Catherine in 1765.

Right Bank and western Ukraine until the Partitions of Poland
      The western Ukrainian lands of Galicia and Volhynia, though part of the theatre of war during the Khmelnytsky insurrection, remained in its aftermath still firmly under Polish control. The Right Bank, after the abatement of the Ruin and the retrocession of Podolia by the Turks, also reverted to Polish sovereignty. However, only in 1714, after further dislocations connected with the Second Northern War, was control reestablished over the area by a greatly weakened Poland.

      The society that reemerged in Ukrainian territories under Polish rule in the 18th century differed markedly from that in the Hetmanate. The Cossacks virtually disappeared as a significant organized force. Cities and towns experienced a serious decline, and their populations became more heavily Polish and, especially in the Right Bank, Jewish. Roman Catholicism maintained and even enhanced its earlier privileged status; the Uniate church, however, became predominant among Ukrainians, with Orthodoxy claiming a smaller number of adherents.

      In the absence of strong central authority and with the elimination of the Cossacks as a countervailing force, the Right Bank was dominated by the Polish nobility. Especially influential were a few magnate families whose huge estates formed virtually independent fiefdoms, with their own privately armed militias. The desolated lands were slowly repopulated through peasant migrations (frequently organized by the nobility) from Galicia and, especially, Volhynia. The extreme exploitation of the enserfed (serfdom) peasantry bred discontent that led sporadically to uprisings by bands of rebels called haydamaks (Turkish: “freebooters” or “marauders”). The most violent, known as the Koliivshchyna, occurred in 1768 and was put down only with the help of Russian troops.

      Polish rule in Ukrainian territories came to an end with the extinction of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in three partitions (Poland, Partitions of)—in 1772, 1793, and 1795 (see Partitions of Poland (Poland, Partitions of)). In the first partition, Galicia was annexed by Habsburg Austria. In the second, Russia took the Right Bank and eastern Volhynia; it absorbed the rest of Volhynia in the third.

Ukraine under direct imperial Russian rule
      Following the abolition of autonomy in the Hetmanate and Sloboda Ukraine and the annexation of the Right Bank and Volhynia, Ukrainian lands in the Russian Empire formally lost all traces of their national distinctiveness. The territories were reorganized into regular Russian provinces (gubernias) administered by governors appointed from St. Petersburg (Saint Petersburg). The Right Bank, along with some adjoining territories, formed part of the Pale of Settlement, to which the Jewish (Jew) population of the empire was residentially restricted (anti-Semitism) (see pale). With the liquidation of the Sich and the annexation of the Crimean khanate (Crimea, khanate of the) in 1783, the sparsely settled southern lands (named Novorossiya, or New Russia) were colonized by migrants from other parts of Ukraine, as well as smaller numbers from Russia, the Balkans, and Germany. This colonization movement greatly expanded Ukrainian ethnic territory. The new Black Sea port of Odessa (Odesa) grew into a large and cosmopolitan metropolis.

      Equally important developments occurred in the social sphere. As compensation for their lost rights as a ruling elite in the Hetmanate, the Cossack starshyna were equalized with the Russian nobility; many entered imperial service, and some achieved the highest government ranks. Through education, intermarriage, and government service, the Ukrainian nobility gradually became Russified—as the earlier Ruthenian nobility had been Polonized—though many retained a sentimental attachment to the land and its folklore. The Polish nobility in the Right Bank continued as the dominant landowning class, although its status eroded over time, particularly after the Polish insurrections of 1830–31 and 1863–64 (see November Insurrection; January Insurrection). The large Jewish population was bound by numerous legal disabilities and, from 1881, victimized by recurrent waves of pogroms (pogrom). The gradual process of enserfment (serfdom) of the peasantry in the Left Bank culminated in 1783 under Catherine II. The obligations there, however, were less onerous than in the Right Bank. Serfdom remained the dominant lot of the peasantry until the emancipation of 1861, and even after emancipation the peasants were still burdened by inadequate land allotments and heavy redemption payments that led to the impoverishment of many (see Emancipation Manifesto).

      Nevertheless, the reforms stimulated the development of industry within the Russian Empire by releasing labour from the land. Industrial development was especially marked in eastern Ukraine, notably the Donbas region ( Donets Basin). However, the workers attracted to the growing metallurgical industry and other industrial concerns generally came from other parts of the empire; the Ukrainian population seeking economic improvement more commonly emigrated to agricultural lands. As a result, the emerging working class and the growing urban centres in Ukraine became highly Russified islands in a Ukrainian rural sea.

      As in the political and social realms, in religious policy the tsarist regime promoted the elimination of Ukrainian peculiarities. Although the largely Polish Roman Catholic Church was allowed to continue, Catherine launched a program of administrative conversion of Ukrainians from the Uniate church (Eastern rite church). The anti-Uniate campaign was partially reversed by her immediate successors but was renewed with vigour by Nicholas I. In 1839 the Uniate metropolitanate was abolished, the Union of Brest-Litovsk declared null and void, and the Uniates finally absorbed into the Russian Orthodox church, while the recalcitrant clergy were harshly punished. The Russian Orthodox Church became an important vehicle for the Russification policies of the imperial regime in Ukraine.

      In the 19th century the development of Ukrainian cultural life was closely connected with academic circles. The first modern university in Ukraine was established in 1805 at Kharkiv, and for 30 years Sloboda Ukraine was the major centre for Ukrainian scholarship and publishing activities. In 1834 a university was founded in Kiev and in 1865 at Odessa. Though Russian institutions, they did much to promote the study of local history and ethnography, which in turn had a stimulative effect on the Ukrainian (Ukrainian literature) national movement.

      Literature, however, became the primary vehicle for the 19th-century Ukrainian national revival. The most important writer—and unquestionably the most significant figure in the development of a modern Ukrainian national consciousness—was Taras Shevchenko (Shevchenko, Taras Hryhorovych). Born a serf, Shevchenko was bought out of servitude by a group of artists who recognized his talent for painting. Though considered by many to be the father of modern Ukrainian painting, Shevchenko made his unique mark as a poet. His poetry spanned themes from the fantastic in folklike ballads to epic romanticization of Cossack glory, from wrathful indictments of social and national oppression under the tsars to mystical reflections based on the biblical prophets. Apart from its seminal impact on the subsequent course of Ukrainian literature, Shevchenko's poetry reflected a conception of Ukraine as a free and democratic society that had a profound influence on the development of Ukrainian political thought.

      By the mid-19th century the cultural and literary stirrings in Ukraine aroused concern in tsarist ruling circles. In the official view, dominant also in Russian historiography, the Ukrainians were a subdivision, or “tribe,” of Russians—“Little Russians”—torn from the unity of Rus by the Mongol-Tatars and deflected from their proper historical course by the baneful influence of Poland. Thus, it was deemed essential to reintegrate Ukraine fully into the Russian body politic. Shevchenko's patriotic verse earned him arrest and years of exile in Central Asia. In 1863 the minister of the interior, Pyotr Valuev, banned virtually all publications in Ukrainian, with the exception of belles lettres. The ban was reinforced by a secret imperial decree, the Ems Ukaz, of Alexander II in 1876 and extended to the publication of belles lettres in Ukrainian, the importation of Ukrainian-language (Ukrainian language) books, and public readings and stage performances in the language. The prohibition even extended to education—a major contributing factor to the low rate of literacy among Ukrainians (only 13 percent in 1897). With such restrictions, writers from Russian-ruled Ukraine could see their works published only in Austrian Galicia, and many figures in the national movement shifted their activities there.

      Tsarist repression and the still premodern, largely rural character of Ukrainian society in the Russian Empire impeded the growth of a political movement. A secret society, the Cyril and Methodius Brotherhood, existed briefly in 1845–47. Its program advocated social equality, an end to national oppression, and a federation of Slavic states under the leadership of Ukraine. The brotherhood was quickly uncovered and suppressed and its leaders arrested and punished. In the second half of the 19th century, clandestine societies called hromadas (“communities”) were formed in various cities to promote Ukrainian culture, education, and publishing under conditions of illegality. Originally associated with the Kiev hromada was the leading political thinker of the time, Mykhaylo Drahomanov, who advocated the transformation of the tsarist empire into a federative republic in which Ukrainian national rights would be assured. Toward the end of the century, younger, primarily student-led hromadas became involved in more overtly political activities. One such group in Kharkiv developed into the Revolutionary Ukrainian Party, which in a pamphlet published in 1900 advanced for the first time as a political goal “one, single, indivisible, free, independent Ukraine.”

      The revolution (Russian Revolution of 1905) that shook the Russian Empire in 1905 spawned worker strikes and peasant unrest in Ukraine as well (see Russian Revolution of 1905). The consequent transformation of the tsarist autocracy into a semiconstitutional monarchy led to some easing in Ukrainian national life. The ban on Ukrainian-language publishing lapsed, and societies to foster popular enlightenment and scholarship proliferated, as did theatrical troupes and musical ensembles. Nevertheless, the population affected by these cultural endeavours remained small, and the Ukrainian language was still excluded from schools.

      In the political arena the introduction of an elected assembly, or Duma, in 1906 initially provided Ukrainians with a new forum to press their national concerns. In the short-lived First and Second Dumas, Ukrainians had a sizable representation and formed their own caucus. Changes in the electoral law to the detriment of the peasantry and national minorities, however, severely limited Ukrainian representation and effectiveness in the Third and Fourth Dumas. Until the Russian Revolution of 1917, the agenda of nationally conscious, politically active Ukrainians seldom exceeded demands for language and cultural rights and some form of local autonomy.

Western Ukraine under the Habsburg (Habsburg, House of) monarchy
      The Habsburgs (Habsburg, House of)' annexation of Galicia from Poland in 1772 was followed two years later by their acquisition of Bukovina, a partly Ukrainian (predominantly in its northern reaches) and partly Romanian territory, from Moldavia. Already under Habsburg rule, as part of the Hungarian crown, was a third ethnically Ukrainian region—Transcarpathia. Within the Habsburg realm these three territories underwent many experiences in common, but they were distinguished also by differences stemming from their specific ethnic environments and earlier histories.

      Under Austria, ethnically Ukrainian Galicia was joined administratively with purely Polish areas to its west into a single province, with Lviv (German: Lemberg) as the provincial capital. This and the fact that, in the province's Ukrainian half, the Poles constituted overwhelmingly the landlord class and dominated the major cities (though many towns were largely Jewish) made Polish-Ukrainian rivalry a crucial feature of Galician life. Although, on balance, Habsburg policies favoured the Poles, Ukrainians (Ruthenians in the contemporary terminology) in Austria enjoyed far greater opportunities for their national development and made far greater progress than did Ukrainians in tsarist Russia.

      The reforms initiated by the Austrian rulers Maria Theresa and Joseph II and the introduction of the imperial bureaucracy in Galicia improved the position of Ukrainians. The peasantry (peasant) benefited from the limitation of the corvée and the abolition of personal bondage to the landlord in the 1780s, as well as from new methods in agriculture promoted by the “enlightened monarchs.” Municipal reforms reversed the decline of cities and led to an improvement in the legal and social position of the Ukrainian urban population. Undertaken as early as 1775, educational reforms allowed for instruction in the native language, although in practice Ukrainian-language teaching was limited largely to low-level parochial schools until the mid-19th century.

      The fortunes of the Uniate church (Eastern rite church) also rose. Renamed the Greek Catholic church in 1774, it was, by imperial decree, equalized in status with the Roman Catholic Church, and in 1807 a metropolitanate was established, with its seat in Lviv. Imperial authorities took pains to raise the educational standards of the clergy. In the early decades of the 19th century, the clergy trained at newly established institutions almost exclusively formed the educated class, and their children, beginning to enter secular professions, gave rise to a Ukrainian intelligentsia. In the course of the 19th century, the Greek Catholic church became a major national, as well as religious, institution.

      The revolution of 1848 (1848, Revolutions of) that swept the Austrian Empire politicized the Ukrainians of Galicia (see Revolutions of 1848 (1848, Revolutions of)). The Supreme Ruthenian Council, established to articulate Ukrainian concerns, proclaimed the identity of Austria's Ruthenians (Ruthenian) with the Ukrainians under Russian rule; demanded the division of Galicia into separate Polish and Ukrainian provinces, the latter to include Bukovina and Transcarpathia; organized a national guard and other small military units; and published the first Ukrainian-language newspaper.

      Although suppressed, the revolution set in motion important transformations in Galician society. The corvée was abolished in 1848. Impoverishment of the Ukrainian peasantry increased, however, due to lack of land reform, rural overpopulation, and a near total absence of industry to absorb the excess labour force. Large-scale emigration to the Americas (specifically the United States, Canada, Brazil, and Argentina) began in the 1880s and continued until World War I.

      Also in the aftermath of the 1848 revolution, the imperial regime reached an accommodation with the Polish nobility that in effect ceded political control of Galicia to the Poles. The local Polish hegemony was little affected by the reforms of the 1860s that gave Austria a constitution and parliament and Galicia its provincial autonomy and diet. The governors appointed by Vienna were exclusively Polish aristocrats. The civil service and Lviv University, which had been Germanized in the early years of Habsburg rule, were Polonized. Elections to the parliament and diet inevitably produced commanding Polish majorities, as voting was based on a curial system that favoured the landowning and urban classes. (Curiae were the political groups, representing various communities and classes of people, that cast the votes.) The occasional efforts by imperial authorities to promote a Polish-Ukrainian reconciliation failed to gain more than minor concessions in the fields of culture and education. The major demands of Ukrainian parliamentary representatives—including the partition of Galicia along ethnic lines, the replacement of the curial electoral system by universal suffrage, and the creation of a Ukrainian university in Lviv—were not met.

      Disappointment with the Habsburgs and concern over the new Polish ascendancy gave rise in the 1860s to pro-Russian sympathies among the older, more conservative, clerical intelligentsia. The Russophiles (Slavophile) promoted a bookish hybrid Ukrainian-Russian language (derogatorily dubbed yazychiie by its critics) and a cultural and political orientation toward Russia. From the 1870s they consistently lost ground to the narodovtsi (populists (Narodnik)), who fostered the use of the vernacular and stressed the ethnic identity of Ukrainians in Austria-Hungary and in the Russian Empire. The narodovtsi developed an extensive press and founded numerous associations (starting with the Prosvita society in 1868) that provided an important outlet for writers and scholars in Russian-ruled Ukraine. Self-organization in the late 19th century extended to women's and youth groups, performing ensembles, cooperatives and credit unions, and, in the 1890s, political parties. By this time, however, the Russophiles had been largely discredited (although they retained control of many key Ukrainian institutions in Galicia), and the leading role of the narodovtsi in the emerging Ukrainian national movement in Galicia was being challenged, though never eclipsed, by a patriotically minded radical movement, whose leading figures included Ivan Franko (Franko, Ivan) and Mykhailo Pavlyk.

      At the turn of the century, the ethnic conflict in Galicia deepened. Massive peasant strikes against the Polish landlords occurred in 1902. Ukrainian university students engaged in demonstrations and clashes with the Poles, and in 1908 a student assassinated the Galician governor. The introduction in 1907 of universal manhood suffrage in elections to the Austrian parliament strengthened Ukrainian representation in Vienna and intensified pressures for a similar reform on the provincial level. Growing tensions with Russia prompted Vienna to seek a Ukrainian-Polish compromise, but Polish opposition kept the old curial electoral system in effect to the end.

      By the outbreak of World War I, Ukrainians in Austrian Galicia were still an overwhelmingly agrarian and politically disadvantaged society. Nevertheless, they had made impressive educational and cultural advances, possessed a large native intelligentsia and an extensive institutional infrastructure, and had achieved a high level of national consciousness, all of which contrasted sharply with the situation prevailing in Russian-ruled Ukraine.

      A small territory between the middle Dniester River and the main range of the Carpathians, Bukovina had formed part of Kievan Rus and the Galician-Volhynian principality. In the 14th century it was incorporated into Moldavia, which in the 16th century became a vassal of the Ottoman Empire. At the time of its annexation by Austria in 1774, the population, Orthodox in religion, was binational, with Ukrainians predominating in the north and Romanians in the south.

      The Habsburgs quickly instituted reforms similar to those in Galicia. Bukovina was joined to Galicia as a discrete district from 1787 to 1849, when it became a separate crownland; it achieved full autonomy in 1861. In the 19th century, sizable Jewish and German communities came into being as a result of immigration. German was the province's official language; however, both Ukrainian and Romanian had currency in public life and, in certain disciplines, at the local university. Romanian-Ukrainian friction grew toward the end of the century over such issues as the Ukrainian attempts to gain parity in the Orthodox church administration, but it did not reach the level of hostility prevailing in Galicia.

      From the late 1860s the Ukrainian national movement in Bukovina paralleled the developments in Galicia, with which there were close connections; a similar network of cultural and civic organizations and publishing enterprises was created. The provision of Ukrainian schools and educational facilities was superior to that of any other Ukrainian territory.

Transcarpathia
      Lying south of the Carpathian Mountains, Transcarpathia was long isolated, both geographically and politically, from other ethnically Ukrainian lands. A domain of Kievan Rus, after 1015 Transcarpathia was absorbed by Hungary, of which it remained a part for almost a millennium. With Hungary, it came in the 16th–17th centuries under the Habsburg dynasty. After the Union of Uzhhorod in 1646, on terms similar to the Union of Brest-Litovsk, the Uniate church became dominant in the religious sphere. Overwhelmingly rural in character, Transcarpathia had a Ukrainian (Ruthenian) peasantry, a powerful Hungarian landowning nobility, and a substantial number of urban and rural Jews. Under Hungary, Transcarpathia did not constitute a single administrative unit but was divided into counties governed by officials appointed from Budapest.

      Social reforms initiated by Vienna in the late 18th century soon foundered on the shoals of Hungarian nobiliary opposition, and educational levels—at the time higher than in Galicia—began to decline in the early 19th century. However, ecclesiastical and cultural ties with Galicia remained strong until mid-century.

      The 1848 revolution (1848, Revolutions of) took a sharply nationalistic turn in Hungary, alienating many among its Slav minorities. Its suppression by Russian troops in 1849 stimulated pro-Russian sentiments among Transcarpathia's intelligentsia and led to the emergence of Russophilism as the territory's main cultural and political orientation. However, the political arrangement of 1867 (Ausgleich) (the Ausgleich) that created the dual Austro-Hungarian monarchy (Austria-Hungary) ceded control over internal policies to the Hungarian oligarchy. Increasing restrictions on the Ruthenian language in schools and publishing resulted in a growing tendency to Magyarization. Not until the turn of the 20th century did a Ukrainophile populist movement develop as a counterpoint to Russophilism and Magyarization. By the outbreak of World War I, Ukrainian national consciousness was still at a low level of development in Transcarpathia.

World War I and the struggle for independence
      The outbreak of World War I and the onset of hostilities between Russia and Austria-Hungary on Aug. 1, 1914, had immediate repercussions for the Ukrainian subjects of both belligerent powers. In the Russian Empire, Ukrainian publications and cultural organizations were directly suppressed and prominent figures arrested or exiled. As Russian forces advanced into Galicia in September, the retreating Austrians executed thousands for suspected pro-Russian sympathies. After occupying Galicia, tsarist authorities took steps toward its total incorporation into the Russian Empire. They prohibited the Ukrainian language, closed down institutions, and prepared to liquidate the Greek Catholic church (Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church). The Russification campaign was cut short by the Austrian reconquest in spring 1915. Western Ukraine, however, continued to be a theatre of military operations and suffered great depredation.

      The Russian Revolution (Russian Revolution of 1917) of February 1917 brought into power the Provisional Government, which promptly introduced freedom of speech and assembly and lifted the tsarist restrictions on minorities. National life in Ukraine quickened with the revival of a Ukrainian press and the formation of numerous cultural and professional associations, as well as political parties. In March, on the initiative of these new organizations, the Central Rada (“Council”) was formed in Kiev as a Ukrainian representative body. In April the more broadly convened All-Ukrainian National Congress declared the Central Rada to be the highest national authority in Ukraine and elected the historian Mykhaylo Hrushevsky as its head. The stated goal of the Central Rada was territorial autonomy for Ukraine and the transformation of Russia into a democratic, federative republic. Although the Provisional Government recognized Ukraine's right to autonomy and the Central Rada as a legitimate representative body, there were unresolved disputes over its territorial jurisdiction and political prerogatives. Locally, especially in the Russified cities of eastern Ukraine, the Rada also had to compete with the increasingly radical soviets of workers' and soldiers' deputies, whose support in the Ukrainian population, however, was quite limited.

      Ukrainian-Russian relations deteriorated rapidly following the Bolshevik coup in Petrograd (formerly St. Petersburg) on Nov. 7, 1917. The Central Rada refused to accept the new regime's authority over Ukraine and on November 20 proclaimed the creation of the Ukrainian National Republic, though still in federation with the new democratic Russia that was expected to emerge from the impending Constituent Assembly. The Bolsheviks, in turn, at the first All-Ukrainian Congress of Soviets, held in Kharkiv in December, declared Ukraine to be a Soviet republic and formed a rival government. In January 1918 the Bolsheviks launched an offensive in the Left Bank and advanced on Kiev. The Central Rada, already engaged in peace negotiations with the Central Powers, from whom it hoped for military assistance, proclaimed the total independence of Ukraine on January 22; on the same day, it passed a law establishing national autonomy for Ukraine's Jewish, Russian, and Polish minorities. Almost immediately, however, the government had to evacuate to the Right Bank, as Soviet troops occupied Kiev. On February 9 Ukraine and the Central Powers signed the Peace Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (Brest-Litovsk, treaties of) (see treaties of Brest-Litovsk (Brest-Litovsk, treaties of)). A German-Austrian offensive dislodged the Bolsheviks from Kiev in early March, and the Rada government returned to the capital. In April the Red Army retreated from Ukraine.

      The socialist policies of the Ukrainian government, especially land nationalization, conflicted with the interest of the German high command to maximize the production of foodstuffs for its own war effort. On April 29, 1918, the Rada government was overthrown in a German-supported coup by Gen. Pavlo Skoropadsky. A collateral descendant of an 18th-century Cossack hetman, Skoropadsky assumed the title “hetman of Ukraine” (which he intended to become hereditary), abrogated all laws passed by the Rada, and established a conservative regime that relied on the support of landowners and the largely Russian urban middle class. The new government aroused intense opposition among Ukrainian nationalists, socialists, and the peasantry. To coordinate political opposition, the Ukrainian National Union was formed by the main parties and civic organizations, while the peasants manifested their hostility through rebellions and partisan warfare. The capitulation of Germany and Austria in November removed the main prop of Skoropadsky's regime, and the Ukrainian National Union formed the Directory of the Ukrainian National Republic to prepare for his overthrow. In a bid for the support of the Allied powers, Skoropadsky announced his intention to join in federation with a future non-Bolshevik Russia, triggering an uprising. On December 14 the hetman abdicated, and the Directory assumed control of government in Kiev.

      Even before the collapse of Austria-Hungary, an assembly of western Ukrainian political leaders in October 1918 declared the formation of a state, shortly thereafter named the Western Ukrainian National Republic, embracing Galicia, northern Bukovina, and Transcarpathia. On November 1 Ukrainian forces occupied Lviv. This act touched off a war (Russo-Polish War) with the Poles, who were themselves resolved to incorporate Galicia into a reconstituted Polish state. The Poles took Lviv on November 21, but most of Galicia remained under Ukrainian control, and the government, headed by Yevhen Petrushevych, transferred its seat to Stanyslaviv (now Ivano-Frankivsk). On Jan. 22, 1919, an act of union of the two Ukrainian states was proclaimed in Kiev, but actual political integration was prevented by the ongoing hostilities. These ultimately took an unfavourable turn for the Ukrainians, and by late July the Poles were in full control of Galicia. Petrushevych and his government evacuated to Right Bank Ukraine and in the autumn went into exile in Vienna, where they continued diplomatic efforts against recognition of the Polish occupation.

      In Kiev the Directory that had taken power in December 1918—initially headed by Volodymyr Vynnychenko and from February 1919 by Symon Petlyura (Petlyura, Symon), who was also the commander in chief—officially restored the Ukrainian National Republic and revived the legislation of the Central Rada. Its attempts to establish an effective administration and to cope with the mounting economic and social problems were stymied, however, by the increasingly chaotic domestic situation and a hostile foreign environment. As the peasants became restless and the army demoralized, partisan movements led by unruly chieftains (commonly known as otamany) escalated in scope and violence. In addition, a substantial irregular force emerged under the command of the charismatic anarchist leader Nestor Makhno. In many places the government's authority was nominal or nonexistent. The Allied powers, including France, whose expeditionary force held Odessa, supported the Russian (Russian Civil War) Whites, whose army was grouping around Gen. Anton Denikin (Denikin, Anton Ivanovich) in southern Russia.

      As authority broke down in Ukraine, random violence increased. In particular, a ferocious wave of pogroms against the Jewish population left tens of thousands dead. The majority of the pogroms occurred in 1919, perpetrated by virtually all regular and irregular forces fighting in Ukraine, including Directory troops, the otamany, the White forces, and the Red Army.

      The Bolsheviks had already launched a new offensive in eastern Ukraine in December 1918. In February 1919 they again seized Kiev. The Directory moved to the Right Bank and continued the struggle. In May Denikin launched his campaign against the Bolsheviks in the Left Bank; his progress westward through Ukraine was marked by terror, restoration of gentry landownership, and the destruction of all manifestations of Ukrainian national life. As the Bolsheviks retreated yet again, Petlyura's Ukrainian forces and Denikin's White regiments both entered Kiev on August 31, though the Ukrainians soon withdrew to avoid overt hostilities. From September to December the Ukrainian army fought with Denikin but, losing ground, began a retreat northwestward into Volhynia. There, confronted by the Poles in the west, the returning Red Army in the north, and the Whites in the south, the Ukrainian forces ceased regular military operations and turned to guerrilla warfare. In December Petlyura went to Warsaw to seek outside support. At the same time, the Bolsheviks were beating back Denikin's forces, and on December 16 they recaptured Kiev. By February 1920 the Whites had been expelled from Ukrainian territory.

      Petlyura's negotiations with the Polish government of Józef Piłsudski (Piłsudski, Józef) culminated in the Treaty of Warsaw, signed in April 1920; by the terms of the agreement, in return for Polish military aid, Petlyura surrendered Ukraine's claim to Galicia and western Volhynia. A Polish-Ukrainian campaign opened two days later, and on May 6 the joint forces occupied Kiev. A counteroffensive mounted by the Bolsheviks brought them to the outskirts of Warsaw in August. The tides of war turned again as the Polish and Ukrainian armies drove back the Soviets and reentered the Right Bank. In October, however, Poland made a truce with the Soviets, and in March 1921 the Polish and Soviet sides signed the Treaty of Riga. Poland extended recognition to Soviet Ukraine and retained the annexed western Ukrainian lands. (See also Russian Civil War; Russo-Polish War.)

Ukraine in the interwar period
      In the aftermath of World War I and the revolutionary upheavals that followed, Ukrainian territories were divided among four states. Bukovina was annexed to Romania. Transcarpathia was joined to the new country of Czechoslovakia. Poland incorporated Galicia and western Volhynia, together with smaller adjacent areas in the northwest. The lands east of the Polish border constituted Soviet Ukraine.

      The territories under Bolshevik control were formally organized as the Ukrainian Socialist Soviet Republic (Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic [S.S.R.] from 1937). Under Bolshevik tutelage, the first All-Ukrainian Congress of Soviets in December 1917 had formed a Soviet government for Ukraine; the second, in March 1918, had declared Soviet Ukraine independent; and the third, in March 1919, had adopted Soviet Ukraine's first constitution. These moves, however, were essentially a tactical response to the demonstrable challenge of rising Ukrainian nationalism. With the consolidation of Bolshevik rule, Soviet Ukraine progressively ceded to Russia its rights in such areas as foreign relations and foreign trade. On Dec. 30, 1922, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.)—a federation of Russia, Ukraine, Belorussia, and the Transcaucasian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic (S.F.S.R.)—was proclaimed. The first constitution for the new multinational federation was ratified in January 1924. Although the constituent republics retained the formal right of secession, their jurisdiction was limited to domestic affairs, while authority over foreign relations, the military, commerce, and transportation was vested in the Communist Party organs in Moscow. In point of fact, after the defeat of the Bolsheviks' opponents, paramount power was exercised over all levels of government, as over the military and the secret police, by the Bolsheviks and their Communist Party apparatus (see Communist Party of the Soviet Union [CPSU] (Communist Party of the Soviet Union)).

      The Communist Party (Communist Party of the Soviet Union) itself brooked no concessions to the principles of independence or federalism and remained a highly centralized entity. Thus, at its founding congress in Moscow in July 1918, the Communist Party (Bolshevik) of Ukraine, or CP(B)U, proclaimed itself to be an integral part of a single Russian (after 1924, All-Union) Communist Party and subordinated to its congresses and central committee, despite the efforts of such national-minded Bolsheviks as Mykola Skrypnyk to declare the CP(B)U an independent organization. As well as being subordinate to Moscow, the CP(B)U was overwhelmingly non-Ukrainian in ethnic composition: at the time of its founding, the membership of fewer than 5,000 was 7 percent Ukrainian. The Ukrainian component in the CP(B)U was strengthened in 1920 with the accession of the Borotbists, members of the “independist” and non-Bolshevik Ukrainian Communist Party that was formed in 1919. Still, in late 1920, Ukrainians constituted less than 20 percent of the CP(B)U's membership. Largely alien in nationality and ideologically prepossessed in favour of the proletariat, the Bolsheviks enjoyed scant support in a population that was 80 percent Ukrainian, of which more than 90 percent were peasants.

The New Economic Policy and Ukrainization
      Two main tasks faced the Bolsheviks in the 1920s—to rebuild the economy and to conciliate the non-Russian nationalities. The policy of War Communism—based on nationalization of all enterprises and the forcible requisition of food—wreaked economic havoc. Compounded by drought, it contributed to a famine in 1921–22 that claimed a million lives in Ukraine. In 1921 Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin (Lenin, Vladimir Ilich) introduced the New Economic Policy (NEP), which partially restored private enterprise in industry and trade and replaced grain requisitions with a fixed tax and the right to dispose of the surplus on the free market. By 1927 the Ukrainian economy recovered to the prewar level, and segments of the population enjoyed a measure of prosperity.

      In parallel with the NEP, the Bolsheviks took steps to appease, and at the same time to penetrate, the non-Russian nationalities. In 1923 a policy of “indigenization” was announced, including the promotion of native languages in education and publishing, at the workplace, and in government; the fostering of national cultures; and the recruitment of cadres from the indigenous populations. In Ukraine this program inaugurated a decade of rapid Ukrainization and cultural efflorescence. Within the CP(B)U itself, the proportion of Ukrainians in the rank-and-file membership exceeded 50 percent by the late 1920s. Enrollments in Ukrainian-language schools and the publication of Ukrainian books increased dramatically. Lively debates developed about the course of Ukrainian literature, in which the writer Mykola Khvylovy employed the slogan “Away from Moscow!” and urged a cultural orientation toward Europe. An important factor in the national revival, despite antireligious propaganda and harassment, was the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church, which had gained a wide following among the Ukrainian intelligentsia and peasantry since its formation in 1921.

      Ukrainization was vigorously promoted by the “national communists,” including such Ukrainian Bolsheviks as Skrypnyk and Khvylovy, and especially by the former Borotbists, most prominently the people's commissar of education, Oleksander Shumsky. The policy, however, encountered strong resistance from the non-Ukrainian leaders of the CP(B)U and party functionaries. The national revival also aroused concern in Moscow, where Joseph Stalin (Stalin, Joseph) was strengthening his grip over the party apparatus. In 1925 Stalin dispatched his trusted lieutenant Lazar Kaganovich (Kaganovich, Lazar Moiseyevich) to head the CP(B)U. Within a year, Kaganovich engineered a split among the “national communists,” Khvylovy's recantation, and the expulsion of Shumsky and his followers from the party. Nevertheless, with Skrypnyk as the new commissar of education, Ukrainization continued to advance.

Industrialization and collectivization
      By the end of the 1920s, Stalin had launched a new “revolution from above.” The introduction of his first five-year plan in 1928 marked the end of the NEP and the onset of breakneck industrialization. In Ukraine this led to rapid economic and social transformation. By the outbreak of World War II, industrial output had increased fourfold, the number of workers had tripled, and the urban (urbanization) population had grown from 19 to 34 percent of the total. Though with a sectoral bias toward heavy industry and a regional concentration in the Donets Basin (Donbas) and central Dnieper area, Ukraine had undergone a remarkable industrial development.

      The cost of the accelerated industrialization was borne by the peasantry (peasant). In 1928 the regime introduced special measures against the kulaks (kulak) (arbitrarily defined “wealthy” peasants). These progressed from escalating taxes and grain-delivery quotas to dispossession of all property and finally to the deportation, by the mid-1930s, of some 100,000 families to Siberia and Kazakhstan. Wholesale collectivization began in 1929, under duress from party activists and under threat of economic sanctions. The percentage of farms collectivized rose from 9 to 65 percent from October 1929 to March 1930 and exceeded 90 percent by the end of 1935. Mass resistance to collectivization—in the form of revolts, slaughter of cattle, and destruction of machinery—was answered by the imposition of ever higher delivery quotas and confiscation of foodstuffs.

The famine of 1932–33
      The result of Stalin's policies was the Great Famine (Holodomor) of 1932–33—a man-made demographic catastrophe unprecedented in peacetime. Of the estimated six to eight million people who died in the Soviet Union, about four to five million were Ukrainians. The famine was a direct assault on the Ukrainian peasantry, which had stubbornly continued to resist collectivization; indirectly, it was an attack on the Ukrainian village, which traditionally had been a key element of Ukrainian national culture. Its deliberate nature is underscored by the fact that no physical basis for famine existed in Ukraine. The Ukrainian grain harvest of 1932 had resulted in below-average yields (in part because of the chaos wreaked by the collectivization campaign), but it was more than sufficient to sustain the population. Nevertheless, Soviet authorities set requisition quotas for Ukraine at an impossibly high level. Brigades of special agents were dispatched to Ukraine to assist in procurement, and homes were routinely searched and foodstuffs confiscated. At the same time, a law was passed in August 1932 making the theft of socialist property a capital crime, leading to scenes in which peasants faced the firing squad for stealing as little as a sack of wheat from state storehouses. The rural population was left with insufficient food to feed itself. The ensuing starvation grew to a massive scale by the spring of 1933, but Moscow refused to provide relief. In fact, the Soviet Union exported more than a million tons of grain to the West during this period.

      The famine subsided only after the 1933 harvest had been completed. The traditional Ukrainian village had been essentially destroyed, and settlers from Russia were brought in to repopulate the devastated countryside. Soviet authorities flatly denied the existence of the famine both at the time it was raging and after it was over. It was only in the late 1980s that officials made a guarded acknowledgement that something had been amiss in Ukraine at this time.

      In parallel with the industrialization and collectivization drives, the Soviet regime commenced a campaign against “nationalist deviations” that escalated into a virtual assault on Ukrainian culture. Repression of the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church culminated in the liquidation of the church in 1930 and the arrest and exile of its hierarchy and clergy. A clandestine organization, the Union for the Liberation of Ukraine, was purportedly uncovered by the secret police in 1929. In 1930 its alleged leaders—including the foremost Ukrainian literary critic of his time, Serhii (Serhy) Yefremov—faced a show trial and were sentenced to terms in labour camps. Arrests, followed by imprisonment, exile, or execution, decimated the ranks of intellectuals, writers, and artists; some, like Khvylovy, committed suicide in protest. In all, some four-fifths of the Ukrainian cultural elite was repressed or perished in the course of the 1930s. By late 1933 Ukrainization had come to a halt, and a policy of Russification commenced.

      The CP(B)U itself emerged from the Stalinist upheavals greatly altered in composition and character. Kaganovich returned in 1928 to Moscow; his place as party chief was taken by Stanislav Kosior, who was joined in 1933 by Pavel Postyshev as second secretary, who was sent from Moscow with a large contingent of Russian cadres. A series of purges from 1929 to 1934 largely eliminated from the party the generation of revolutionaries, supporters of Ukrainization, and those who questioned the excesses of collectivization. Mykola Skrypnyk, the most prominent Ukrainian Old Bolshevik, committed suicide in 1933. Though party ranks and leadership positions were now filled by Stalin loyalists, a new wave of purges (purge trials) during 1936–38 halved the CP(B)U's membership, while 99 of 102 members of the party's Central Committee were shot. Postyshev and Kosior were removed from their party posts and subsequently executed. In 1938 Nikita Khrushchev (Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeyevich) arrived from Moscow with a large number of Russian communists to take over the leadership of the CP(B)U. Finally, on the eve of World War II, both the terror and the turmoil in the party began to subside. (See also purge trials.)

Western Ukraine under Polish rule
      Important differences marked the two main regions that found themselves in the confines of reconstituted Poland. Galicia was the less ethnically homogeneous. From the Austrian period, however, the Galician Ukrainians brought a long history of self-organization and political participation and inherited a broad network of cultural and civic associations, educational establishments, and publishing enterprises. And in the Greek Catholic church they possessed an influential national, as well as religious, institution. The population of Volhynia was more heavily Ukrainian; nevertheless, as a consequence of imperial Russian rule since 1795, there was little tradition of organized national life, native education, or political experience. As a legacy of tsarist rule, the dominant Orthodox church was initially a bastion of Russian influence. Still, in the course of the two decades before World War II, considerable national integration between Galician and Volhynian Ukrainians took place, despite Polish efforts to forestall such a development.

      As individuals, all citizens of Poland enjoyed equal rights under the 1921 constitution; in practice, discrimination on the basis of nationality and religion greatly limited the Ukrainians' opportunities. Although the Allied powers in 1923 accepted the Polish annexation of Galicia on the basis of its regional autonomy, the government in the early 1920s proceeded to dismantle the institutions of local self-government inherited from Habsburg times. Ukrainian Galicia, officially termed “Eastern Little Poland,” was administered by governors and local prefects appointed by Warsaw. A special administrative frontier, the so-called Sokal border, was established between Galicia and Volhynia to prevent the spread of Ukrainian publications and institutions from Galicia to the northeast. In 1924 the Ukrainian language was eliminated from use in state institutions and government agencies. In the face of economic stagnation, scant industrial development, and vast rural overpopulation, the government promoted Polish agricultural settlement, further exacerbating ethnic tensions. As Ukrainian nationalist activities quickened toward the end of the 1920s and in the '30s, the regime resorted to more repressive measures. Some organizations were banned, and in 1930 a military and police pacification campaign led to numerous arrests, widespread brutality and intimidation, and destruction of property.

      Much of the Ukrainian-Polish conflict centred on the schools. Initially, the government concentrated on establishing a centralized educational system and expanding the network of Polish schools; however, by the 1930s, overt Polonization of education was being promoted. The number of Ukrainian schools declined drastically. In higher education the existing Ukrainian chairs at Lviv were abolished, and a promised separate Ukrainian university was never allowed to be established. An underground Ukrainian university functioned in Lviv from 1921 to 1925.

      In a society where nationality and religion were almost inextricably bound, the church played an extraordinarily large role. In Galicia, under the leadership of the highly revered metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky, the Greek Catholic church (Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church) conducted its religious mission through numerous clergy and monastic orders. The church also ran a network of seminaries, schools, charitable and social service institutions, museums, and publications. Although Catholicism of the Roman rite remained privileged, the Greek Catholic church was made relatively secure from overt state interference by the Vatican-Polish Concordat of 1925; however, it was not allowed to extend its activities beyond the Sokal border.

      In the northwestern Ukrainian areas, Orthodoxy (Eastern Orthodoxy) remained the dominant religion. A nationally conscious clergy and lay intelligentsia played an important role in Ukrainian life in Volhynia, although Russian influences continued at the level of ecclesiastical administration. In the 1930s Polish authorities promoted, sometimes by force, the conversion of the Orthodox to Roman Catholicism and, in a campaign that lasted until World War II, seized hundreds of Orthodox churches for closure, destruction, or transfer to the Roman Catholic Church.

      Despite official obstruction and harassment, organized community life continued to develop on the foundations established in the Austrian period in Galicia. Cultural, scholarly, professional, women's, and youth associations flourished. In circumstances of economic depression and discrimination in public employment, a large-scale development of the cooperative movement was highly successful. Much progress was also achieved in Volhynia; most difficult, however, was the situation in ethnically mixed border areas in the northwest, where by the 1930s all Ukrainian organizations were suppressed and schooling was conducted exclusively in Polish.

      Ukrainian political life was dominated by conflict with the Poles. The first elections to the Polish Sejm (diet) and Senate, in 1922, were boycotted by the Galician Ukrainians. In Volhynia the Ukrainians participated and, in a bloc with the Jews and other minorities, won overwhelmingly against Polish candidates. Both Galician and Volhynian Ukrainians took part in subsequent elections, which, however, were increasingly marred by abuses, intimidation, and violence. Of the political parties, most influential in Galicia was the centrist Ukrainian National Democratic Alliance, which tried to extract concessions from the Polish government and to inform public opinion. Left-wing parties (socialists and communist front organizations) had considerably more strength in Volhynia.

      Revolutionary nationalism became an influential current under Polish rule. In 1920 the clandestine Ukrainian Military Organization was founded by veterans of the independence struggle, headed by Yevhen Konovalets. In 1929 this was transformed into a broader underground movement, the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN). Authoritarian in structure, conspiratorial in its methods, and influenced by political theories that stressed the primacy of the nation over the individual and will over reason, the OUN carried out acts of sabotage and assassinations of Polish officials. Although these activities were opposed by the Ukrainian democratic parties as politically counterproductive and by the Greek Catholic hierarchy on moral grounds, the OUN gained a wide following in the 1930s among students and peasant youth, more in Galicia than in Volhynia.

Bukovina under Romanian rule
      In the formerly Austrian province of Bukovina, Ukrainians constituted two-fifths of the total population but two-thirds in the northern half (in 1931). Following the collapse of the Habsburg monarchy, northern Bukovina was briefly proclaimed part of the Western Ukrainian National Republic, before the entire province was occupied by the Romanian army in November 1918. Under a state of emergency that lasted from 1919 to 1928, Bukovina was subjected to strong assimilationist pressures. Provincial self-government was abolished and the Ukrainian language removed from administrative use. The extensive Ukrainian school system and the university chairs at Chernivtsi were liquidated, and the Ukrainian press and most organizations were banned. Assimilationist measures were relaxed beginning in 1928, but, with the institution of the royal dictatorship of Carol II in 1938, Ukrainian culture was suppressed once again.

Transcarpathia in Czechoslovakia
      On the basis of a negotiated agreement, Transcarpathia voluntarily joined the new country of Czechoslovakia in 1919 under the official name of Subcarpathian Ruthenia (see Czechoslovak region, history of (Czechoslovak history)). Its promised autonomy, however, was not implemented until 1938, and the region was administered largely by officials sent from Prague. Nevertheless, in democratic Czechoslovakia, Transcarpathia enjoyed the freest development of any Ukrainian territory in the interwar period.

      Reforms improved social and economic conditions in the previously underdeveloped area, and substantial progress was achieved in education and culture, while political life developed freely. The dominant political issue in interwar Transcarpathia was the national orientation of a population whose identity had not yet crystallized. The competition for national allegiance pitted three main movements against each other, each with its own organizations and publications: the Russophiles, dominant among the older intelligentsia; an indigenous Ruthenian current; and the populist Ukrainophiles, who attracted members from among the younger intelligentsia and who, by the end of the 1930s, were gaining in ascendancy.

      In the wake of the Munich agreement, which allowed Germany's annexation of a portion of western Czechoslovakia, in October 1938 Prague finally granted autonomy to Transcarpathia, officially renamed Carpatho-Ukraine. In November Hungary occupied a strip of territory including the Carpatho-Ukrainian capital of Uzhhorod, and the autonomous government transferred its seat to Khust. On March 15, 1939, the diet proclaimed the independence of Carpatho-Ukraine while the country was already in the midst of occupation by Hungarian troops. For the duration of World War II, Transcarpathia was again under the control of Hungary.

World War II and its aftermath
Western Ukraine under Soviet and Nazi rule
      The Nazi (Nazi Party) German invasion of Poland on Sept. 1, 1939, marked the beginning of World War II. By mid-September, in accordance with the secret protocols of the German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact (Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact (German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact)), western Volhynia and most of Galicia, both previously under Polish rule, were occupied by Soviet troops and soon officially incorporated into the Ukrainian S.S.R. In June 1940 northern Bukovina was occupied and shortly annexed to Soviet Ukraine from Romania (which sided with Germany during the war). The replacement of Polish and Romanian by the Ukrainian language in state administration and education was offset by a suppression of all existing organizations, Sovietization of institutional life, and arrests of political leaders and community activists. By mid-1941 more than one million people had been deported to the east, including large numbers of Poles and Jews.

      The ethnically mixed western borderlands, with more than 500,000 Ukrainians, were included in the administrative region of Poland established by the Nazis. A limited linguistic and cultural revival in the heavily Polonized area was permitted under German oversight, but political activities were banned, except for the OUN. The OUN itself was rent by factional strife between the followers of Andry Melnyk, who headed the organization from abroad after the assassination of Konovalets by a Soviet agent in 1938, and the younger supporters of Stepan Bandera with actual experience in the conspiratorial underground. The split became permanent after a congress held in Kraków in February 1940, when the Melnyk and Bandera factions developed into separate organizations (OUN-M and OUN-B, respectively) differing in ideology, strategy, and tactics.

The Nazi occupation of Soviet Ukraine
      The surprise German invasion of the U.S.S.R. began on June 22, 1941. The Soviets, during their hasty retreat, shot their political prisoners and, whenever possible, evacuated personnel, dismantled and removed industrial plants, and conducted a scorched-earth policy—blowing up buildings and installations, destroying crops and food reserves, and flooding mines. Almost four million people were evacuated east of the Urals (Ural Mountains) for the duration of the war. The Germans moved swiftly, however, and by the end of November virtually all of Ukraine was under their control.

      Initially, the Germans were greeted as liberators by some of the Ukrainian populace. In Galicia especially, there had long been a widespread belief that Germany, as the avowed enemy of Poland and the U.S.S.R., was the Ukrainians' natural ally for the attainment of their independence. The illusion was quickly shattered. The Germans were accompanied on their entry into Lviv on June 30 by members of OUN-B, who that same day proclaimed the restoration of Ukrainian statehood and the formation of a provisional state administration; within days the organizers of this action were arrested and interned in concentration camps (as were both Bandera and, later, Melnyk). Far from supporting Ukrainian political aspirations, the Nazis in August attached Galicia administratively to Poland, returned Bukovina to Romania, and gave Romania control over the area between the Dniester and Southern Buh rivers as the province of Transnistria, with its capital at Odessa. The remainder was organized as the Reichskommissariat Ukraine.

      In the occupied territories, the Nazis (anti-Semitism) sought to implement their “racial” policies. In the fall of 1941 began the mass killings (Holocaust) of Jews (Jew) that continued through 1944. At least 600,000 (some estimates are as high as 850,000–900,000) Ukrainian Jews perished; at Baby Yar in Kiev, nearly 34,000 were killed in just the first two days of massacre in the city. The Nazis were aided at times by auxiliary forces recruited from the local population. (See also Holocaust: The Einsatzgruppen (Holocaust).)

      In the Reichskommissariat, ruthlessly administered by Erich Koch, Ukrainians were slated for servitude. The collective farms, whose dissolution was the fervent hope of the peasantry, were left intact, industry was allowed to deteriorate, and the cities were deprived of foodstuffs as all available resources were directed to support the German war effort. Some 2.2 million people were taken from Ukraine to Germany as slave labourers (Ostarbeiter, or “eastern workers”). Cultural activities were repressed, and education was limited to the elementary level. Only the revived Ukrainian Orthodox Church was permitted to resume its work as a national institution. Somewhat better was the situation of Ukrainians in Galicia, where restricted cultural, civic, and relief activities were permitted under centralized control.

      Under such conditions of brutality, Ukrainian political activity, predicated originally on cooperation with the Germans, increasingly turned to underground organizational work and resistance. The OUN groups that streamed eastward in 1941 were soon subjected by the German authorities to repressive measures, including execution, so they propagated their nationalist views clandestinely and, through their contact with the local population, began to revise their ideology in a more democratic, pluralist direction. In eastern and central Ukraine, secret Communist Party cells maintained an underground existence, and a Soviet partisan movement developed in the northern forests. Early in 1942 began the formation of nationalist partisan units in Volhynia, and later in Galicia, that became known as the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (Ukrainska Povstanska Armiia; UPA). As well as conducting guerrilla warfare with the Germans, the Soviet partisans and the UPA fought each other.

Ukraine reunited under Soviet rule
      After their victory over the Germans at the Battle of Stalingrad (Stalingrad, Battle of) in early 1943, the Soviets launched a counteroffensive westward. In mid-1943 the Germans began their slow retreat from Ukraine, leaving wholesale destruction in their wake. In November the Soviets reentered Kiev. With the approach of the front, guerrilla activity in western Ukraine intensified, and bloody clashes that claimed large numbers of civilian victims occurred between Ukrainians and Poles. In spring 1944 the Red Army began to penetrate into Galicia, and by the end of October all of Ukraine was again under Soviet control.

      The Soviet victory, the Red Army's occupation of eastern Europe, and Allied diplomacy resulted in a permanent redrawing of Ukraine's western frontiers. With compensation of German territories in the west, Poland agreed to the cession of Volhynia and Galicia; a mutual population exchange—and the subsequent deportation of the remaining Ukrainian population by Poland to its new western territories—created for the first time in centuries a clear ethnic, as well as political, Polish-Ukrainian border. Northern Bukovina was reoccupied in 1944 and recognized as part of Ukraine in the Paris Peace Treaty of 1947. Transcarpathia, which had reverted from Hungary to Czechoslovakia in 1944, was ceded to Ukraine in 1945 by a Czech-Soviet government agreement. In 1945 Ukraine became a charter member of the United Nations and subsequently became a signatory of peace treaties with Germany's wartime allies—Italy, Finland, Romania, Hungary, and Bulgaria.

      Ukraine's human and material losses during World War II were enormous. Some 5 to 7 million people perished. Even with the return of evacuees from the east and the repatriation of forced labourers from Germany, Ukraine's estimated population of 36 million in 1947 was almost 5 million less than before the war. Because more than 700 cities and towns and 28,000 villages had been destroyed, 10 million people were left homeless. Only 20 percent of the industrial enterprises and 15 percent of agricultural equipment and machinery remained intact, and the transportation network was severely damaged. The material losses constituted an estimated 40 percent of Ukraine's national wealth.

Soviet Ukraine in the postwar period
The last years of Stalin's rule
      Postwar reconstruction, the reimposition of totalitarian controls and terror, and the Sovietization of western Ukraine were the hallmarks of the last years of Stalin's rule. Economic reconstruction was undertaken immediately as Soviet authorities reestablished control over the recovered territories. The fourth five-year plan, as in the prewar years, stressed heavy industry to the detriment of consumer needs. By 1950, Ukraine's industrial output exceeded the prewar level. In agriculture, recovery proceeded much more slowly, and prewar levels of production were not reached until the 1960s. A famine in 1946–47 resulting from postwar dislocations and drought claimed nearly one million casualties.

      The prewar system of totalitarian control exercised through the Communist Party and the secret police (NKVD) was quickly reimposed. Khrushchev (Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeyevich) continued to head the CP(B)U as first secretary—except briefly from March to December 1947—until his promotion to secretary of the Central Committee in Moscow in December 1949; he was succeeded by Leonid Melnikov. Purges in party ranks were relatively mild. However, real and alleged Nazi collaborators, former German prisoners of war and repatriated slave workers, Ukrainian “bourgeois nationalists,” and others suspected of disloyalty—essentially hundreds of thousands of people—were sent to concentration camps in the far north and Siberia. A hard-line ideological campaign to stamp out Western influences went hand in hand with a renewed Russification drive. Ukrainian writers, artists, and scholars, who in the wartime years had been permitted to develop patriotic themes and sentiments in a mobilization effort against the Germans, were now accused of Ukrainian nationalism and subjected to persecution and repression. An “anticosmopolitan” campaign destroyed the remaining vestiges of cultural institutions of a Jewish community decimated by the Holocaust.

      The Sovietization of western Ukraine was a prolonged and violent process. The UPA, under the leadership of Roman Shukhevych (killed 1950), continued effective military operations against Soviet troops until the early 1950s. The armed resistance received covert support from the local rural population, embittered by the concurrent forced collectivization drive, reminiscent of the 1930s in eastern Ukraine. Also accused of abetting the partisans, and Ukrainian nationalism in general, was the Greek Catholic church. In April 1945 Metropolitan Yosyf Slipy and the entire hierarchy in Galicia were arrested and later sentenced to long imprisonment (only Slipy survived, to be released in 1963 and sent into exile in Rome). After arrests and intimidation of the clergy, a synod held in Lviv in March 1946—in fact, on Stalin's orders—proclaimed the “reunification” of the Ukrainian Greek Catholics with the Russian Orthodox Church. By analogous means, the Greek Catholic church in Transcarpathia was abolished in 1949. Officially declared “self-liquidated,” the Greek Catholic church maintained a clandestine existence through subsequent decades of Soviet rule. Overall, approximately half a million people were deported from western Ukraine in connection with the suppression of the insurgency and nationalist activity, religious persecution, and collectivization.

The period of Khrushchev (Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeyevich)
      Khrushchev's ascendancy over his rivals in Moscow after Stalin's death in 1953 was of particular significance for Ukraine. As first secretary of the CP(B)U, Khrushchev had gained intimate knowledge of Ukraine, staffed party and government posts with his own trusted appointees, and become familiar with Ukrainian cultural elites. In contrast to Stalin's anti-Ukrainian paranoia, Khrushchev harboured few prejudices against Ukrainians who adhered to the party line and served the Soviet state with loyalty.

      Shortly after the death of Stalin, Melnikov was removed as first secretary of the Communist Party of Ukraine, or CPU—as the CP(B)U was renamed in 1952—for “deviations in nationality policy,” specifically, promotion of nonnative cadres and Russification of higher education in western Ukraine. His replacement was Oleksy Kyrychenko, only the second Ukrainian to fill the post. This and accompanying changes in personnel in the party and government boosted morale and confidence, especially as their sphere of competence was also steadily increased. Unionwide celebrations in 1954 of the 300th anniversary of the “reunification” of Ukraine with Russia were another sign of the Ukrainians' rising (though clearly junior) status; on the occasion, the Crimean Peninsula, from which the indigenous Tatar population had been deported en masse at the end of World War II, was transferred from the Russian S.F.S.R. to Ukraine. Ukrainian party officials began to receive promotions to central party organs in Moscow close to the levers of power. In 1957 Kyrychenko was transferred to Moscow as a secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU; his place as first secretary of the CPU was taken by Mykola Pidhorny (Nikolay Podgorny (Podgorny, Nikolay)), who moved to Moscow as a secretary of the Central Committee in 1963. There was a steady expansion of party membership, which by the end of 1958 exceeded one million, of whom 60.3 percent were Ukrainians and 28.2 percent Russians; more than 40 percent had joined the party after the war.

      Khrushchev also introduced a limited decentralization in government administration and economic management. These measures enhanced the powers and stoked the ambitions of the Ukrainian party and government leaders and bureaucracy, and this in turn elicited warnings against “localism” from Moscow. Economic recovery in Ukraine continued, with impressive—though diminishing over time—rates of growth in industry. Some concessions were made in the provision of consumer goods. Agriculture lagged, however, despite reforms in the administration of collective farms to increase productivity.

      By 1953 mass terror had abated, and repression came to be applied more discriminately. An amnesty in 1955–56 released the majority of concentration camp inmates, and several hundred thousand returned to Ukraine, though many political prisoners continued to serve their long sentences. During the cultural thaw and the de-Stalinization campaign that followed Khrushchev's secret speech in 1956, Ukrainian cultural elites pressed more boldly for concessions. Writers who had suffered under Stalin received praise and honours. Qualified rehabilitation was extended to condemned figures from the 1920s and '30s, and historians began to treat previously forbidden topics. Some proscribed literary works were republished, and a number of new periodicals made their appearance, including the first journal since the 1930s devoted to Ukrainian history.

      In the latter half of Khrushchev's reign, however, a distinct trend toward Russification reemerged. An educational reform adopted in 1959 initiated a long process of curtailment of Ukrainian-language instruction in schools. In 1961 the new party program emphasized the importance of the Russian language for the integration of the Soviet peoples and spoke of the diminishing significance of borders between Soviet republics. Party theoreticians evolved the theory of “fusion of nations” that would be accompanied by the disappearance of national languages as Soviet society progressed toward communism.

      Small, clandestine dissident groups began to form in the late 1950s, primarily as discussion circles on Ukrainian political and cultural alternatives. Some dozen such groups were uncovered by the secret police and their members imprisoned between 1958 and 1964. With open opposition to the party line impossible, defense of the Ukrainian language and culture was usually expressed indirectly—through poetry extolling the mother tongue, complaints about the unavailability of Ukrainian-language textbooks, and calls for subscription to Ukrainian periodicals.

      Khrushchev's last years in power witnessed the rise to prominence of two figures—Petro Shelest and Volodymyr Shcherbytsky—who between them dominated Ukraine's political landscape for almost 30 years. The earlier careers of both encompassed party work in regional party organizations. In 1961 Shcherbytsky became chairman of the Council of Ministers (premier) of Ukraine. Upon the elevation of Pidhorny to Moscow, in June 1963 Shelest succeeded him as party leader in Ukraine, and simultaneously Shcherbytsky lost the premiership and went into eclipse.

Ukraine under Shelest
      Until Leonid Brezhnev (Brezhnev, Leonid Ilich) achieved preeminence by the mid-1970s, power in Moscow after Khrushchev's ouster was shared by a collective leadership headed by a triumvirate consisting of Brezhnev, Aleksey Kosygin (Kosygin, Aleksey Nikolayevich), and Pidhorny. Shelest, Pidhorny's protégé, became a full member of the Politburo within a month of Khrushchev's ouster. However, Brezhnev's client, Shcherbytsky, shortly reemerged from relative obscurity; he reassumed the premiership in Kiev in 1965 and became a candidate member of the Politburo in Moscow in 1966.

      Although the new leadership in Moscow quickly reversed many of Khrushchev's decentralizing measures, it initially showed greater sensitivity toward the non-Russians. The seeming retreat in Moscow's nationalities policy, connected with the leadership's preoccupation with the succession struggle, facilitated the three main trends that characterize the Shelest era in Ukraine: the growing cultural revival, greater assertiveness by Kiev's political elite, and the development of a large-scale dissident movement.

      The cultural revival was built on the hard-won, though necessarily limited, achievements of the de-Stalinization thaw. It was spearheaded by a younger “generation of the '60s” (shestydesyatnyky) who, without the formative first-hand experience of Stalin's reign of terror, experimented with themes and forms that at times provoked the ire of the preceding generation. More proscribed figures from the past were rehabilitated as literary scholars, and historians explored previously forbidden topics. New journals and serials devoted to Ukrainian history made their appearance, and monumental encyclopaedic publications were launched. Such efforts came under severe attack from party ideologues and the conservative cultural establishment. Announced publications failed to appear, published works were withdrawn from circulation, and numerous works of art were destroyed. Plans prepared on the ministerial level in Kiev for a partial de-Russification of higher education were never implemented.

      Nevertheless, the cultural achievements were unparalleled since the Ukrainization period in the 1920s. They were made possible by the support of influential segments of the party leadership, most notably Shelest himself. In addition to supporting Ukrainian culture, Shelest defended the economic interests of Ukraine, pressing for a larger share in the U.S.S.R.'s allocation of investment and greater republican control in economic management. These efforts were aimed in part at strengthening the party's legitimacy in the eyes of the Ukrainian population. During Shelest's tenure, Communist Party membership in Ukraine grew at a rate double the all-union average to reach 2.5 million by 1971.

      From its embryonic beginnings in the late 1950s and early '60s, the dissident movement continued to develop under Shelest. In 1965 the first arrests and trials of 20 dissidents occurred; profiles of these dissenters were circulated clandestinely, and their compiler, the journalist Vyacheslav Chornovil, was also arrested and imprisoned. The national dissent movement grew rapidly thereafter. It took the form of protest letters and petitions to the authorities, the formation of informal clubs and discussion circles, and public meetings and demonstrations. Increasingly the materials prepared by the dissidents were circulated through samvydav (“self-publication”—the Ukrainian equivalent of Russian samizdat), some of which made its way abroad and was published. An outstanding work in this regard was Ivan Dziuba's Internationalism or Russification?, which was translated and published in several languages. Throughout the 1960s, however, reprisals for dissident activity were generally mild.

      Beginning in 1970, there were signs that the relative permissiveness of the Shelest regime was drawing to a close. The head of the KGB in Ukraine was replaced. Harsh rhetoric about “anti-Soviet activities” and “bourgeois nationalism” increased; tribute was paid to “the great Russian people.” In 1971 Brezhnev's protégé and Shelest's rival, Shcherbytsky, was elevated to full member of the Politburo. Between January and April 1972, several hundred dissidents and cultural activists were arrested in a wave of repression that swept Ukraine. In May Shelest was removed as Ukraine's party leader, succeeded by Shcherbytsky. Shelest continued for another year as a member of the Politburo and a deputy prime minister in Moscow, but in May 1973 he lost all his remaining party and government positions.

Ukraine under Shcherbytsky
      Shcherbytsky's promotion marked an important step in the consolidation of power in Moscow by his patron, Brezhnev, and a turning point in Ukrainian postwar politics. Shcherbytsky survived in office 17 years until his resignation in the fall of 1989, a few weeks before his death—long after the death of Brezhnev in 1982 and well into the tenure of Mikhail Gorbachev (Gorbachev, Mikhail).

      Personnel changes in the party and government followed gradually after Shcherbytsky's accession to office; many of them involved the removal of Shelest's supporters and the promotion of cadres associated with the site of Shcherbytsky's (and Brezhnev's) earlier career, the Dnipropetrovsk regional Communist Party organization. The most significant occurred in October 1972: Valentyn Malanchuk, who had previously conducted ideological work in the nationally highly charged Lviv region, was appointed secretary for ideology. A purge in 1973–75 removed almost 5 percent of the CPU members from party rolls.

      Arrests of national and human rights activists continued through 1972–73. The bulk of samvydav literature was now produced in labour camps, and much of it made its way abroad, where it was published. Following the signing of the international Helsinki Accords, with their human rights provisions, in 1975, the Helsinki Watch Group was founded in Ukraine, headed by the poet Mykola Rudenko; by the end of the 1970s, its members were almost all in concentration camps or in exile abroad. The expirations of political prisoners' sentences were increasingly followed by rearrest and new sentences on charges of criminal activity. Incarceration in psychiatric institutions became a new method of political repression.

      Political repression (censorship) was accompanied by a broad assault on Ukrainian culture and intensification of Russification. Immediately after Shelest's fall, the circulation of the most popular Ukrainian periodicals was substantially reduced, and most of the new journals and serials started under Shelest ceased publication; a general decline in Ukrainian-language publishing and education continued during Shcherbytsky's tenure. For two years after his appointment as secretary for ideology, Malanchuk supervised a purge of Ukrainian scholarly and cultural institutions, with numerous expulsions from the Academy of Sciences, universities, editorial boards, and the official organizations of writers, artists, and cinematographers. The general trend was unaffected by Malanchuk's unexpected removal in 1979, which may have been a concession to the disaffected cultural intelligentsia, whose cooperation was needed in the upcoming celebrations of the 325th anniversary of the “reunification of Ukraine with Russia” that year and the 1,500th anniversary of the founding of Kiev in 1982.

 Ukraine's economic performance continued to deteriorate throughout the 1970s and '80s. The rates of growth declined, and serious problems beset especially the important ferrous metallurgy and coal mining industries. Agricultural production was adversely affected by a series of droughts, a lack of incentives, and excessive centralization in collective farm management. Soviet energy policy increasingly emphasized nuclear power, and in April 1986 one of the nuclear power plants in Ukraine, at Chernobyl (Chernobyl accident) just northwest of Kiev, suffered the worst nuclear accident in history. Dozens died in the immediate aftermath, and tens of thousands were evacuated. Hundreds of thousands remained in contaminated areas, however, and the long-term effects on human life and health—likely to include a steep increase in the incidence of cancer—remain incalculable (see Chernobyl accident). Nevertheless, and despite changes in the top leadership in Moscow since 1982, Shcherbytsky remained securely in office.

Ukraine on the path to independence
      An upsurge of nationalism was the unexpected and unintended consequence of Gorbachev (Gorbachev, Mikhail)'s attempt to grapple with the Soviet Union's mounting economic problems. Beginning in 1986, Gorbachev launched a campaign for an ill-defined economic perestroika (“restructuring”) and called for an honest confrontation with real problems, or glasnost (“openness”), which further entailed popular involvement in the process. In the non-Russian republics, these policies opened the opportunity to voice not merely economic but also predominantly national concerns.

      In contrast to the rapid growth of mass movements in the Baltic and Transcaucasian republics, in Ukraine the national revival stimulated by glasnost developed only gradually. From mid-1986 the Ukrainian press and media, at first cautiously, began to broach long-forbidden topics. While this process expanded and intensified, the spontaneous formation locally of unofficial groups, primarily in Kiev and Lviv, began in 1987. The year 1988 witnessed the rise of mass mobilization, with the first public demonstrations—in Lviv from June through August and in Kiev in November—and the emergence of embryonic national organizations. Finally, the national revival in Ukraine entered the stage of overt politicization in 1989.

      In the three years 1987–89, new leaders emerged. Especially prominent were many cultural activists from the shestydesyatnyky of the Shelest period, as well as former dissidents. The issues that galvanized Ukrainian society at this time included such traditional concerns as language, culture, and history, resurgent interests such as religion, and new concerns over the environment and the economy.

      Russification and the parlous state of the Ukrainian language in schools, publishing, and state administration received the earliest attention. Fears about the long-term language trends were confirmed by data from the 1989 census: at the same time that Ukrainians had declined as a percentage of Ukraine's population, their attachment to Ukrainian as their native language had fallen even more rapidly. Debates over the issue culminated in the passage of a language law in autumn 1989 that for the first time gave Ukrainian official status as the republic's state language.

      A campaign to fill in the “blank spots” in history aimed to restore public awareness of neglected or suppressed historical events and figures such as Hetman Ivan Mazepa (Mazepa, Ivan), to rehabilitate historians such as Mykhaylo Hrushevsky, and to republish banned works of pre-Soviet historical scholarship. Particularly intense were efforts to introduce knowledge of the Stalin period, especially the Great Famine of 1932–33, which became labeled the “Ukrainian genocide.” Fresh revelations appeared in the press about mass graves of political prisoners executed in the Stalin era. To honour the victims of Stalinism and to promote investigations of the repressions and famine of the 1930s, the Ukrainian “Memorial” Society was founded in March 1989 based on already existing local groups.

      A religious revival was also under way in 1988, greatly stimulated by celebrations of a millennium of Christianity in Kievan Rus. Lavish government-supported Russian Orthodox (Russian Orthodox church) solemnities in Moscow were countered with unofficial celebrations throughout Ukraine, including open observances by the proscribed Greek Catholics. As bishops and clergy emerged from the underground, demands grew for the relegalization of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. Defections by the clergy and entire congregations from Russian Orthodoxy began in the fall of 1989, and, on the eve of Gorbachev's visit to the Vatican in December, Soviet authorities announced that Greek Catholic communities would be allowed official registration. In a parallel development, the formation of an initiative group for the restoration of the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church was proclaimed in February 1989 in Kiev.

      Continuing revelations about the scale of the Chernobyl catastrophe and mounting evidence of official wrongdoing in its aftermath, combined with fresh disclosures about other disasters and the environmental ruination of Ukraine, engendered a widespread ecological movement. On the initiative of scientists and writers, environmental (conservation) groups were formed in virtually every region, and in December 1987 they joined in a national association, Zeleny Svit (“Green World”). In the course of 1989, Zeleny Svit evolved into a potent political force led by the writer Yury Shcherbak. (See also environmentalism.)

      The traditionally passive industrial workers in Ukraine also became organized, especially in the Donbas (Donets Basin). Years of neglect by Moscow resulted in steady deterioration of the coal-mining industry and increasingly hazardous working conditions in the mines. Complaints in the form of letters by miners began to appear as early as 1985. But it was only in July 1989 that a spontaneous movement of self-organization by Donbas miners led to a strike. Concessions extended by Moscow were insufficient to stem the growing alienation. In the course of the year, the overwhelmingly Russian-speaking miners, with concerns far removed from those of the Ukrainian cultural intelligentsia, began to be drawn to the Ukrainian national movement as a defender of their interests in confrontation with Moscow.

      The first significant organization with an overtly political agenda was launched in March 1988. This was the Ukrainian Helsinki Union, formed by recently released political prisoners, many of whom had been members of the Helsinki Watch Group of the mid-1970s. The Helsinki Union's declared aim was the restoration of Ukraine's sovereignty as the main guarantee of its population's national and human rights and the transformation of the U.S.S.R. into a genuine confederation of states. Headed by Levko Lukyanenko, with Vyacheslav Chornovil as an important leader, the Ukrainian Helsinki Union had branches in all regions of Ukraine by 1989.

      At all stages, the process of national revival and autonomous self-organization encountered bitter resistance from the CPU, which under Shcherbytsky remained among the most unreconstructed of the U.S.S.R.'s republican Communist Party organizations. Opposition to the rising democratic forces took the form of propaganda attacks in the press and media, intimidation, harassment, and occasional arrests. Shcherbytsky himself continued firmly in charge of the CPU, in a sign of Moscow's fear of destabilization in Ukraine. Nevertheless, the official policies of perestroika and glasnost inhibited more-extreme measures, while the example of rapid change in other republics, especially the Baltics, emboldened democratic Ukrainian activists.

      The year 1989 marked the transition from social mobilization to mass politicization of life in Ukraine. Elections to a new supreme legislative body in Moscow, the Congress of People's Deputies, brought victory to a significant number of noncommunist candidates. Numerous Communist Party candidates, including highly placed officials, suffered defeat, all the more humiliating in those cases when they ran unopposed; the party's confidence was shaken, and resignations began to rise significantly.

      Attempts to organize a popular front received impetus in January 1989 under the aegis of the Writers' Union of Ukraine. Taking the name Popular Movement of Ukraine for Reconstruction, or Rukh, to emphasize its congruence with the policies of Gorbachev (particularly perestroika), the front nevertheless ran into hostility from the CPU. Specifically eschewing the role of a political opposition, Rukh advocated a program of democratization and support for human, national, and minority rights. The founding congress was held in September and elected a leadership headed by the poet Ivan Drach.

      On Sept. 28, 1989, Shcherbytsky, long rumoured to be ill, resigned as first secretary of the CPU. His successor, Volodymyr Ivashko, while praising his predecessor and reaffirming the CPU's basic policy line, made the first cautious references to new political realities and the need for the Communist Party to take these into account. These realities included a rapid institutionalization of national, civic, and religious life that outpaced legal recognition.

      The most significant development of 1990 was the beginning of parliamentary democracy. The first competitive elections to the Ukrainian parliament (which replaced the old-style Supreme Soviet), held on March 4, broke the Communist Party's monopoly on political power in Ukraine. The parliament that met in mid-May had a substantial democratic bloc that, with the defection of numerous communist deputies from strict party discipline on particular issues, reduced the CPU's core majority to 239 of the 450 members. Changes in the political leadership proceeded rapidly and culminated in the parliament's election of the recent CPU secretary for ideology, Leonid Kravchuk (Kravchuk, Leonid), as its chairman. On July 16 sovereignty (though not yet independence) was claimed in the name of the “people of Ukraine”—the entirety of Ukraine's resident population without regard to nationality or ethnicity; the declaration marked the onset of a gradual convergence of views on key issues between the communist majority and the democratic opposition, whose agenda was increasingly adopted by the pragmatic Kravchuk.

      Gorbachev (Gorbachev, Mikhail), faced with a rising tide of nationalism, had already proposed a renegotiated new union treaty that would extend broad autonomy to the Soviet republics while preserving central control of foreign policy, the military, and the financial system. To forestall the cession of newly asserted sovereign rights to Moscow, student-led mass demonstrations and a hunger strike were held in Kiev in October 1990; the protests extracted concessions that included the resignation of the premier. In the same month, Rukh, whose membership was growing rapidly, proclaimed as its ultimate goal the total independence of Ukraine. Only the CPU declared its support for Gorbachev's plans of a new union treaty.

      A coup d'état organized in August 1991 by hard-line members of Gorbachev's government in Moscow collapsed within two days. In its wake the Ukrainian parliament, in emergency session, declared the full independence of Ukraine on August 24. The declaration was made subject to popular ratification by a referendum on December 1.

Independent Ukraine
      The population of Ukraine voted overwhelmingly for independence in the referendum of Dec. 1, 1991. (About 84 percent of eligible voters turned out for the referendum, and about 90 percent of them endorsed independence.) In an election coinciding with the referendum, Kravchuk was chosen as president. By this time, several important developments had taken place in Ukraine, including the dissolution of the Communist Party and the development (under the newly appointed Minister of Defense Kostiantyn Morozov) of the infrastructure for separate Ukrainian armed forces. Ukraine also had withstood political pressure from Moscow to reconsider its course toward independence and enter into a restructured Soviet Union. A week after the independence referendum, the leaders of Ukraine, Russia, and Belarus agreed to establish the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). Shortly thereafter the U.S.S.R. was formally disbanded.

Postindependence issues
      Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Ukraine was commonly regarded as the former Soviet republic (outside of those in the Baltic region) with the best chance of achieving economic prosperity and integration with Europe as a whole. But by the end of the 20th century, the Ukrainian economy had faltered badly, and social and political change fell short of transforming Ukraine into a wholly European state. Nevertheless, Ukraine registered some important gains in this period. It consolidated its independence and developed its state structure, regularized relations with neighbouring countries (in spite of some contentious issues), made some important steps in the process of democratization, and established itself as a member in good standing of the international community.

State building and diplomacy
      President Kravchuk's immediate priority was state building. Under his stewardship, Ukraine quickly established its armed forces and the infrastructure of an independent state. Citizenship was extended to the people of Ukraine on an inclusive (rather than ethnic or linguistic) basis. Ukraine received widespread international recognition and developed its diplomatic service. A pro-Western foreign policy was instituted, and official pronouncements stressed that Ukraine was a “European” rather than a “Eurasian” country. The state symbols and national anthem of the post-World War I Ukrainian National Republic were reinstituted. Yet at the same time that independent Ukraine was acquiring the attributes of statehood, it faced a number of contentious issues that severely strained the fledgling country: the nature of its participation in the CIS, nuclear disarmament, the status of the Crimea, and control of the Black Sea Fleet and its port city of Sevastopol. While inflaming passions on both sides of the border, these issues also helped to define Ukraine's new relationship with Russia.

      Ukrainian leaders perceived the CIS to be no more than a loose association of former Soviet republics and a means of assisting in a “civilized divorce” from the union. In contrast, Russia regarded it as a means of retaining some degree of regional integration (under Moscow's political domination) and sought to establish it as a supranational body that would succeed the U.S.S.R. These differing views were not clear at the meeting that created the CIS, but within several weeks they had become very evident. Disagreements between Russia and Ukraine ensued as the latter repudiated proposals for a CIS army under unified command, a common CIS citizenship, and the guarding of “external” rather than national borders. Remaining vigilant that involvement with the CIS not compromise its sovereignty, Ukraine participated only as an associate member. However, after more than seven years of independence, with the CIS no longer a real threat to the country's sovereignty, Ukraine finally agreed to join the CIS Interparliamentary Assembly in March 1999.

      The issue of nuclear disarmament proved a vexing one. In the wake of the Chernobyl disaster, antinuclear popular sentiment ran high in Ukraine; even prior to independence, Ukrainian leaders had committed themselves to divesting the country of nuclear weapons. But throughout this period, Ukrainians had not been aware of the size of the nuclear arsenal on their soil—Ukraine was effectively the third largest nuclear power in the world at the time—nor had they considered the high costs and logistical problems of nuclear divestment. After approximately half of the arsenal had been transferred to Russia early in 1992, the leaders of independent Ukraine began to question the wisdom of blindly handing over the weapons to a potential adversary that was now claiming portions of Ukraine's territory (i.e., the Crimea). Ukraine then expressed reservations about the complete removal of the weapons from the country before it could obtain some guarantees for its security as well as financial compensation for the dismantling and transportation of the warheads. This apparent backtracking caused major concern in the West (particularly in the United States) and Russia. Intense diplomatic pressure followed, and Ukraine began to be portrayed as something of a rogue state in the Western media. Finally, in May 1992 Ukraine signed the Lisbon Protocol, which marked Ukraine's accession to the START I treaty (see Strategic Arms Reduction Talks). Subsequent negotiations, brokered by the United States, resulted in a trilateral statement (between the United States, Russia, and Ukraine) in January 1994, which outlined a timetable for disarmament and dealt with the financial and security issues that Ukraine had raised.

      The interconnected issues of the Crimea, Sevastopol, and the Black Sea Fleet not only constituted Ukraine's thorniest postindependence problem but also posed a significant threat to peace in the region. In 1954 the Russian S.F.S.R. had transferred the administration of the Crimea to the Ukrainian S.S.R. However, it was the one region of Ukraine where ethnic Russians constituted a majority of the population. In 1991 the Crimea was granted the status of an autonomous republic, and the Crimeans supported the vote for Ukrainian independence (albeit by a small majority). But disenchantment with an independent Ukraine soon followed, and a movement for greater autonomy or even secession developed in the peninsula. The separatists were encouraged in their efforts by routine pronouncements by prominent Russian politicians and the Russian Duma that the Crimea was Russian territory that never should have been part of Ukraine. The situation was complicated by the arrival of about 250,000 Crimean Tatars in the peninsula—returning to the historic homeland from which they had been deported at the end of World War II—starting in the late 1980s.

      Tensions in the region increased in 1994: separatist leader Yury Meshkov was elected Crimean president in January, and a referendum calling for sovereignty was passed two months later. Meshkov proved to be an inept leader, however, and he quickly alienated his own supporters. By September he and the Crimean parliament were locked in a constitutional struggle. The parliament finally stripped Meshkov of his powers and elected a pro-Kiev prime minister. In March 1995 Ukraine abolished the post of Crimean president and instituted direct political rule, though it granted the Crimea significant economic concessions. The Crimean separatist movement collapsed.

      The dispute between Russia and Ukraine over control of the Black Sea Fleet and Sevastopol, the Crimean port city where the fleet was based, was particularly acrimonious. Early in 1992 Ukraine laid claim to the entire fleet, which had been an important naval asset of the Soviet Union. Russia responded unequivocally that the fleet always had been and would remain Russia's. A “war of decrees” over the issue continued until June 1992, when Kravchuk and Russian Pres. Boris Yeltsin (Yeltsin, Boris) agreed that the fleet would be administered jointly for a three-year period. Subsequently an agreement was reached to divide the fleet's assets evenly, but after further negotiation Ukraine consented to allow Russia to acquire a majority share of the fleet in exchange for debt forgiveness. The question of basing rights was not resolved until a final agreement on the Black Sea Fleet was reached in 1997. It allowed Russia to lease the main port facilities of Sevastopol for 20 years. Shortly afterward, Ukraine and Russia signed the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation, and Partnership (1997), which recognized Ukraine's territorial sovereignty and existing borders (including the Crimea) and regularized relations to some degree.

      The turbulent relations between Ukraine and Russia in the post-Soviet period were likely inevitable, given that the independence of Ukraine was such a sudden, fundamental change. Russia had tremendous difficulty in perceiving—let alone accepting—Ukraine as an independent country: it viewed Ukraine as an integral part of the Russian realm and even considered Ukrainians to be virtually the same people as Russians. Consequently, Russia reacted to Ukraine's departure more strongly than it did to the separation of the other Soviet republics. On the other hand, Ukraine was intensely aware of the fragility of its recent independence and extremely sensitive to any perceived encroachment on its sovereignty by Russia. Relations between the two countries continued to be volatile into the early 21st century. Ukraine's dependence on Russia for fossil fuels was an issue of particular concern. For example, in 2006 Russia temporarily cut off its supply of natural gas to Ukraine after claiming that Ukraine had not paid its bills. Ukraine, however, maintained that the move was a reprisal for its pro-Western policies.

      Ukraine's relations with its other neighbours tended to be much more cordial. Relations with Hungary were from the outset friendly. Poland was supportive of Ukrainian independence as well, notwithstanding earlier centuries of acrimony. Ukraine also fostered a working relationship with several countries of the former Soviet Union by cofounding a loose subregional organization called GUAM ( Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Moldova; known as GUUAM from 1999 to 2005, when Uzbekistan was a member). Relations with Romania were complicated by that country's claims to certain Ukrainian territories, including northern Bukovina and southern Bessarabia, as well as Zmiyinyy (Serpent) Island and its surrounding waters in the Black Sea. Belarus's authoritarian political system and its proposed two-state union with Russia rendered close ties with Ukraine unlikely.

      Ukraine's relations with the United States started out very poorly. During a visit to Ukraine in the summer of 1991, U.S. Pres. George Bush (Bush, George) affronted many Ukrainians when he warned them against “suicidal” nationalism and urged them to remain within the U.S.S.R. When Ukraine gained independence later that year, Washington was extremely concerned about the new country's large nuclear arsenal. Only after the resolution of the disarmament issue did significant ties begin to develop. Ukraine soon ranked as a major recipient of U.S. foreign assistance, and the two countries developed a strong political relationship.

Economic difficulties
      Ukraine's postindependence economic performance—in sharp contrast to its relatively successful efforts at state building and diplomacy—was markedly poor. The social dislocation brought about by economic “shock therapy” in Russia dampened the Ukrainian government's desire for rapid change; it opted instead for a gradualist approach toward achieving a mixed economy. Economic decline followed, since Ukrainian industry was already suffering from the disruption of trade with former Soviet republics in the wake of the U.S.S.R.'s demise. Ukraine's heavy dependence on foreign energy sources also strained the economy, particularly because Russia, Ukraine's main supplier, moved to raise the previously subsidized price of fossil fuels to world levels. As a solid monetary policy had not been established, Ukraine experienced hyperinflation, which reached a rate of at least 4,735 percent in 1993. Meanwhile, corruption increased as political insiders grabbed state assets for themselves or took unfair advantage of low-interest loans available to industry and agriculture. A sustained attempt at economic reform came with the appointment of Leonid Kuchma (Kuchma, Leonid) as prime minister in October 1992. His efforts, however, were strongly opposed by a majority of parliamentarians and, to a degree, undermined by President Kravchuk himself. An exasperated Kuchma resigned in 1993.

Social developments
      Postindependence society in Ukraine saw some positive developments. The media became much more open and vibrant, although those who were too openly critical of the administration were subject to harassment, notably during Kuchma's presidency (1994–2005). Previous constraints on academic and intellectual life were lifted, resulting in a growing and diverse body of publications, and liberal arts and business schools began to emerge. There was substantial development in religious life, as the Ukrainian Orthodox and Ukrainian Catholic churches—as well as other denominations—were able to operate freely. In addition, a new generation of youth began to grow up without the ideological and intellectual constraints of Soviet society.

      Relations with minority groups in the postindependence period were generally peaceful. The Jewish community experienced something of a renaissance, with the American-born chief rabbi of Kiev, Yaakov Dov Bleich, playing an instrumental role in organizing synagogues, schools, and charitable activities. Moreover, the Ukrainian government openly pursued a positive relationship with the Jewish community. The Hungarians and Romanians in western Ukraine were afforded nationality rights, and the government made some efforts to assist the Tatars, the majority of whom live in squatter settlements in the Crimea. Unrest among the Tatars was limited in the postindependence period, in large measure because of the effective leadership of former dissident Mustafa Jemilev.

      Ukraine's large Russian minority found itself in an ambiguous situation in the postindependence years. As part of the dominant nationality within the U.S.S.R., it had maintained the preferred status of what some observers termed a “psychological majority” in Soviet Ukraine. In independent Ukraine, however, the status of Russians was less assured. Although granting Ukrainian Russians the full rights of citizenship was never an issue, many of them were frustrated that Russian was not recognized as the second official language of the country. Moreover, the gradual Ukrainization of the school system has not been popular in regions of Ukraine with large Russian populations. The matter was further complicated by Russia's vow to defend the rights of ethnic Russians in the so-called “near-abroad,” which includes Ukraine.

      Postindependence Ukraine witnessed the growth of numerous social ills. Both street crime and organized crime increased, and Ukraine became a conduit for the international illegal drug trade. A rise in the number of drug addicts accompanied a worrisome growth in the number of people infected with HIV. The trafficking of Ukrainian women for the international sex trade also emerged as a serious concern—evidenced by the fact that Ukraine was the first former Soviet republic to host an office of La Strada International (a network of organizations that work to prevent human trafficking). Life expectancy fell, particularly for males, and occurrences of diseases considered long eradicated, such as cholera, were recorded. Many people—especially the elderly—were reduced to living in dire poverty, and many others sought work outside Ukraine, both legally and illegally, as migrant labourers.

Kuchma's presidency
      Parliamentary and presidential elections were held in Ukraine in 1994. In the first contest, candidates affiliated with the revived Communist Party emerged as the largest single group, winning approximately one-fifth of the seats; factoring in the deputies of the Socialist and Agrarian parties, the left now constituted a strong—although not united—bloc in the new parliament. In the presidential election the incumbent president, Kravchuk, was narrowly defeated by former prime minister Kuchma, who promised economic reform and better relations with Russia. The two contests seemed to reveal a political polarization between eastern and western Ukraine. Kuchma and the left received their greatest support from the more heavily industrialized and Russophone regions of eastern Ukraine, while Kravchuk did particularly well in western Ukraine, where Ukrainian speakers and national democrats predominated. Nevertheless, the minimal number of irregularities in the elections and the peaceful replacement of the president were widely interpreted as signs that democracy was taking root in Ukraine.

      Once in office, Kuchma maintained many of his predecessor's policies. Significantly, while seeking more cordial relations with Moscow, he did not reorient Ukraine's foreign policy northward. Ukraine continued to participate in the CIS but in much the same manner as it had previously. Moreover, Kuchma maintained Ukraine's pro-Western policies and aspirations. In 1994 Ukraine joined the Partnership for Peace Programme run by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO); the country also established a “special partnership” with the organization in 1996. In 1995 Ukraine joined the Council of Europe (Europe, Council of).

      Kuchma faced a major challenge in dealing with a strong parliamentary opposition, particularly in respect to economic reform. Ukraine managed to achieve macroeconomic stabilization by 1996, the year in which it introduced its long-awaited currency, the hryvnya. However, the economy continued to perform poorly through the end of the decade. Cumbersome bureaucratic procedures and unenforced economic legislation led business to be both overregulated and rife with corruption. In addition, the country was able to attract only a limited amount of foreign investment. The Russian economic crisis of 1998 negatively affected Ukraine's economy as well. But in 1999 the introduction of tax-reform measures saw a growth in the number of small private businesses established or emerging from the country's significant shadow economy. At the turn of the 21st century the legitimate economy began to grow.

      In the 1998 parliamentary elections the Communist Party actually improved its showing. In the 1999 presidential election, however, Kuchma defeated Communist Party leader Petro Symonenko by a resounding margin. Politically, Kuchma had benefited from the splintering of the left among several candidates. He also had campaigned vigorously, using all the means available to him, particularly the media. Indeed, a strong bias in favour of Kuchma became evident in the television coverage of the election. International observers were critical of Kuchma's handling of the media and some obvious electoral irregularities. His margin of victory, however, indicated that these factors alone had not determined the outcome of the vote.

      The result of the 1999 election was significant in two respects. First, it represented a rejection of the communist past. Some observers remarked that it even constituted a second referendum on independence. Second, the vote did not split neatly along geographical lines, indicating that the east-west divide seen in the 1994 elections was not as important a factor in Ukrainian politics as many analysts had suggested.

Lubomyr A. Hajda Andrij Makuch
      During Kuchma's second term, conflicts between right- and left-wing forces sometimes threatened political stability. Nevertheless, newly appointed prime minister Viktor Yushchenko (Yushchenko, Viktor) shepherded economic reforms through the legislature. The economy grew steadily in the first years of the 21st century, but the political situation remained tense in Ukraine as it sought membership in NATO and the European Union (EU) while also pursuing closer relations with Russia—a delicate balancing act. In 2003 Ukraine accepted in principle a proposal to establish a “joint economic space” with Russia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan; however, Ukrainian-Russian relations were strained by Russian accusations of deteriorating conditions for the Russian minority in Ukraine, along with Ukrainian concerns over what it viewed to be Russian expansionist designs in the Crimea.

      Yushchenko became an opposition leader following his dismissal as prime minister in 2001. The following year, audio tapes allegedly revealed Kuchma's approval of the sale of a radar system to Iraq, in violation of a United Nations Security Council resolution, and implicated him in the assassination of a dissident journalist in 2000. Opposition groups called for the impeachment of Kuchma, who denied the allegations.

The Orange Revolution and beyond
 The presidential election of 2004 brought Ukraine to the brink of disintegration and civil war. Cleared to seek a third term as president by the Constitutional Court, Kuchma instead endorsed the candidacy of Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych, who was also strongly supported by Russian Pres. Vladimir Putin (Putin, Vladimir). Yushchenko—running on an anticorruption, anticronyism platform—emerged as the leading opposition candidate, but his campaign was prevented from visiting Yanukovych's stronghold of Donetsk and other eastern cities. In September Yushchenko's health began to fail, and medical tests later revealed he had suffered dioxin poisoning (allegedly carried out by the Ukrainian State Security Service), which left his face disfigured. In the first round of the presidential election, on October 31, Yushchenko and Yanukovych both won about two-fifths of the vote. In the runoff the following month, Yanukovych was declared the winner, though Yushchenko's supporters charged fraud and staged mass protests that came to be known as the Orange Revolution. For nearly two weeks the country endured demonstrations, and Yanukovych's supporters in the east threatened to secede from Ukraine if the results were annulled. Nevertheless, on December 3 the Supreme Court ruled the election invalid and ordered a new runoff for December 26. Yushchenko subsequently defeated Yanukovych by garnering some 52 percent of the vote. Although Yanukovych challenged the validity of the results, Yushchenko was inaugurated on Jan. 23, 2005.

  Political turmoil occupied the first few years of Yushchenko's presidency. His first cabinet served only until September 2005, when he dismissed all his ministers, including Prime Minister Yuliya Tymoshenko (Tymoshenko, Yuliya), a fellow leader of the Orange Revolution. The next prime minister, Yury Yekhanurov, stayed in office only until January 2006. Parliamentary elections early that year saw Yushchenko's Our Ukraine party finish third, behind Yanukovych's Party of Regions and the Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc. When a proposed coalition of the so-called Orange parties in parliament fell apart, Yushchenko was forced to accept his rival Yanukovych as prime minister. The ensuing power struggle between the president and the prime minister, whose political role had been enhanced by constitutional reforms that took effect in 2006, led Yushchenko to call for another round of parliamentary elections in 2007. Once again the president's party finished behind both Yanukovych's and Tymoshenko's parties. This time, however, a coalition with the Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc held together, allowing the pro-Western Orange parties to form a government with Tymoshenko as prime minister. As the government continued to balance the often conflicting goals of maintaining positive relations with Russia and gaining membership in the EU, dissent between Yushchenko and Tymoshenko contributed to the collapse of their coalition in September 2008. In October the president dissolved parliament. Parliamentary elections, at first scheduled for December, later were canceled, and Yushchenko's and Tymoshenko's parties agreed to form a new coalition, together with the smaller Lytvyn Bloc, headed by Volodymyr Lytvyn.

Ed.

Additional Reading

General works
Encyclopaedic reference sources on the country include M.P. Bazhan et al. (eds.), Soviet Ukraine (1969; originally published in Ukrainian, 1964); and the most extensive reference works available in the West: Volodymyr Kubijovyč (ed.), Ukraine: A Concise Encyclopedia, 2 vol. (1963–71; originally published in Ukrainian, 3 vol., 1949–52), a thematic approach; and Volodymyr Kubijovyč and Danylo Husar Struk (eds.), Encyclopedia of Ukraine, 5 vol. (1984–93; originally published in Ukrainian, 10 vol., 1955–84), an alphabetic treatment. Zenon E. Kohut, Bohdan Y. Nebesio, and Myroslav Yurkevich, Historical Dictionary of Ukraine (2005), is another useful reference work.

Geography
English-language sources on the physical geography of Ukraine are limited. L.S. Galetskii, An Atlas of the Geology and Mineral Deposits of Ukraine (2007), is an invaluable work. Regional geography studies cited in the bibliography to the article Union of Soviet Socialist Republics can be informative. A brief survey, Geography of Ukraine (1985), prepared by the Ukrainian Information Collective in Australia, is also useful. Details on all aspects of the geography of Ukraine are found in O.M. Marynych et al. (eds.), Heohrafichna entsyklopediia Ukraïny, 3 vol. (1989–93), a beautifully illustrated encyclopaedic work in Ukrainian.Among surveys of the country's economy are I.S. Koropeckyj (ed.), Ukrainian Economic History: Interpretive Essays (1991), and The Ukraine Within the USSR: An Economic Balance Sheet (1977); and Vsevolod Holubnychy, Soviet Regional Economics (1982). Other solid studies include I.S. Koropeckyj, Development in the Shadow: Studies in Ukrainian Economics (1990), and The Ukrainian Economy: Achievements, Problems, Challenges (1992); and King Banaian, The Ukrainian Economy Since Independence (1999).Soviet-era issues that influenced the political and social situation in Ukraine are dealt with in separate chapters of Lubomyr Hajda and Mark R. Beissinger (eds.), The Nationalities Factor in Soviet Politics and Society (1990). Book-length studies include Jaroslaw Bilocerkowycz, Soviet Ukrainian Dissent: A Study of Political Alienation (1988); Bohdan Krawchenko, Social Change and National Consciousness in Twentieth-Century Ukraine (1985); Peter J. Potichnyj (ed.), Ukraine in the Seventies (1975); Bohdan Krawchenko (ed.), Ukraine After Shelest (1983); and Serhy Yekelchyk, Stalin's Empire of Memory: Russian-Ukrainian Relations in the Soviet Historical Imagination (2004).Ukrainian cultural expression is the subject of M.P. Bazhan (ed.), Istoriia ukraïns'koho mystetstva, 6 vol. in 7 (1966–70); George S.N. Luckyj, Between Gogol and Sevcenko: Polarity in the Literary Ukraine: 1798–1847 (1971); Dmytro Čyževs'kyj, A History of Ukrainian Literature, from the 11th to the End of the 19th Century (1975; originally published in Ukrainian, 1956); George G. Grabowicz, Toward a History of Ukrainian Literature (1981); George S.N. Luckyj, Literary Politics in the Soviet Ukraine, 1917–1934, rev. and updated ed. (1990), and Ukrainian Literature in the Twentieth Century: A Reader's Guide (1992); and Sviatoslav Hordynsky, The Ukrainian Icon of the XIIth to the XVIIIth centuries, trans. from Ukrainian (1973).Religion is examined in Borys A. Gudziak, Crisis and Reform: The Kyivan Metropolitanate, the Patriarchate of Constantinople, and the Genesis of the Union of Brest (1998, reissued 2001); Piotr Wawrzeniuk, Confessional Civilising in Ukraine: The Bishop Iosyf Shumliansky and the Introduction of Reforms in the Diocese of Lviv, 1688–1708 (2005); John-Paul Himka, Religion and Nationality in Western Ukraine: The Greek Catholic Church and Ruthenian National Movement in Galicia, 1867–1900 (1999); Frank E. Sysyn, The Ukrainian Orthodox Question in the USSR (1987); Bohdan Rostyslav Bociurkiw, The Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church and the Soviet State, 1939–1950 (1996); and Ivan Hvat, “The Ukrainian Catholic Church, the Vatican, and the Soviet Union During the Pontificate of Pope John Paul II,” Religion in Communist Lands, 11(3):264–294 (Winter 1983). Serhii Plokhy and Frank E. Sysyn, Religion and Nation in Modern Ukraine (2003), addresses the role played by religion in the creation of a Ukrainian national identity.

History
Comprehensive historical surveys include Michael Hrushevsky (Mykhailo Hrushevskyi), A History of Ukraine, trans. from Ukrainian (1941, reissued 1970); Dmytro Doroshenko, A Survey of Ukrainian History, updated ed., rev. by Oleh W. Gerus, trans. from Ukrainian (1975); Orest Subtelny, Ukraine: A History, 2nd ed. (1994); and Paul Robert Magocsi, A History of Ukraine (1996), a large-scale work with modern and balanced syntheses. Mykhailo Hrushevsky (Mykhailo Hrushevskyi), History of Ukraine-Rus', trans. by Marta Skorupsky, ed. by Andrzej Pope, Frank E. Sysyn, and Uliana M. Pasicznyk (1997– ; originally published in Ukrainian, 10 vol., 1898–1937), is a monumental work by the preeminent Ukrainian historian. Hrushevsky's life and work are examined in Thomas M. Prymak, Mykhailo Hrushevsky: The Politics of National Culture (1987); and Serhii Plokhy, Unmaking Imperial Russia: Mykhailo Hrushevsky and the Writing of Ukrainian History (2005). Concise survey histories of Ukraine include Roman Szporluk, Ukraine: A Brief History, 2nd expanded ed. (1982); and Paul R. Magocsi, Ukraine: An Illustrated History (2007). Ivan L. Rudnytsky, Essays in Modern Ukrainian History, ed. by Peter L. Rudnytsky (1987); and Ihor Ševčenko, Ukraine Between East and West: Essays on Cultural History to the Early Eighteenth Century (1996), are useful collections of essays by outstanding historians. Ukraine's relations with other peoples and countries are examined in Peter J. Potichnyj, Poland and Ukraine, Past and Present (1980); Howard Aster and Peter J. Potichnyj (eds.), Ukrainian-Jewish Relations in Historical Perspective, 2nd ed. (1990); Peter J. Potichnyj et al. (eds.), Ukraine and Russia in Their Historical Encounter (1992); and Hans-Joachim Torke and John-Paul Himka (eds.), German-Ukrainian Relations in Historical Perspective (1994). Paul Robert Magocsi and Geoffrey J. Matthews, Ukraine: A Historical Atlas (1985), offers a helpful supplement for the better understanding of interpretive discussions.Studies of special subjects include Simon Franklin and Jonathan Shepard, The Emergence of Rus, 750–1200 (1996); Linda Gordon, Cossack Rebellions: Social Turmoil in the Sixteenth-Century Ukraine (1983); Frank E. Sysyn, Between Poland and the Ukraine: The Dilemma of Adam Kysil, 1600–1653 (1985); John Basarab, Pereiaslav 1654 (1982); Zenon E. Kohut, Russian Centralism and Ukrainian Autonomy: Imperial Absorption of the Hetmanate, 1760s–1830s (1988); Murray Jay Rosman, The Lords' Jews: Magnate-Jewish Relations in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth During the Eighteenth Century (1990); Jan Kozik, The Ukrainian National Movement in Galicia, 1815–1849, ed. by Lawrence D. Orton, trans. from Polish (1986); Andrei S. Markovits and Frank E. Sysyn (eds.), Nationbuilding and the Politics of Nationalism: Essays on Austrian Galicia (1982); and John-Paul Himka, Galician Villagers and the Ukrainian National Movement in the Nineteenth Century (1988). Key works on the historic events of the 20th century are John S. Reshetar, The Ukrainian Revolution, 1917–1920: A Study in Nationalism (1952, reissued 1972); Taras Hunczak (ed.), The Ukraine, 1917–1921: A Study in Revolution (1977); Henry Abramson, A Prayer for the Government: Ukrainians and Jews in Revolutionary Times, 1917–1920 (1999); James E. Mace, Communism and the Dilemmas of National Liberation: National Communism in Soviet Ukraine, 1918–1933 (1983); Jurij Borys, The Russian Communist Party and the Sovietization of Ukraine: A Study in the Communist Doctrine of the Self-determination of Nations (1960, reprinted 1983); Robert Conquest, The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-Famine (1986); Terry Martin, The Affirmative Action Empire: Nations and Nationalism in the Soviet Union, 1923–1939 (2001); Yuri Boshyk, Roman Waschuk, and Andriy Wynnyckyj (eds.), Ukraine During World War II: History and Its Aftermath (1986); John A. Armstrong, Ukrainian Nationalism, 3rd ed. (1990); Karel C. Berkhoff, Harvest of Despair: Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule (2004); Yaroslav Bilinsky, The Second Soviet Republic: The Ukraine After World War II (1964); Borys Lewytzkyj, Politics and Society in Soviet Ukraine, 1953–1980 (1984); and David R. Marples, The Social Impact of the Chernobyl Disaster (1988).Studies of Ukraine in the late perestroika and independence periods include Alexander J. Motyl, Dilemmas of Independence: Ukraine After Totalitarianism (1993); Taras Kuzio and Andrew Wilson, Ukraine: Perestroika to Independence (1994); Andrew Wilson, Ukrainian Nationalism in the 1990s: A Minority Faith (1996); Taras Kuzio, Ukraine Under Kuchma: Political Reform, Economic Transformation, and Security Policy in Independent Ukraine (1997); Sherman W. Garnett, Keystone in the Arch: Ukraine in the Emerging Security Environment of Central and Eastern Europe (1997); Lubomyr A. Hajda (ed.), Ukraine in the World: Studies in the International Relations and Security Structure of a Newly Independent State (1998); Catherine Wanner, Burden of Dreams: History and Identity in Post-Soviet Ukraine (1998); Paul D'Anieri, Robert Kravchuk, and Taras Kuzio, Politics and Society in Ukraine (1999); Bohdan Nahaylo, The Ukrainian Resurgence (1999); Bohdan Harasymiw, Post-Communist Ukraine (2002); Andrew Wilson, The Ukrainians: Unexpected Nation, 2nd ed. (2002); J.V. Koshiw, Beheaded: The Killing of a Journalist (2003); and Sarah Whitmore, State-Building in Ukraine: The Ukrainian Parliament, 1990–2003 (2004). The revolution in the early 21st century in Ukrainian politics is discussed in Andrew Wilson, Ukraine's Orange Revolution (2005); Anders Aslund and Michael McFaul (eds.), Revolution in Orange: The Origins of Ukraine's Democratic Breakthrough (2006); and Paul D'Anieri, Understanding Ukrainian Politics: Power, Politics, and Institutional Design (2007).The history of Ukrainians outside Ukraine is examined in Orest Subtelny, Ukrainians in North America: An Illustrated History (1991); Ann Lencyk Pawliczko (ed.), Ukraine and Ukrainians Throughout the World (1994); Vic Satzewich, The Ukrainian Diaspora (2002); and Wsevolod W. Isajiw, Yury Boshyk, and Roman Senkus (eds.), The Refugee Experience: Ukrainian Displaced Persons After World War II (1992). An excellent guide for tracing Ukrainian ancestry is John D. Pihach, Ukrainian Genealogy (2007).Andrij Makuch

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