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In December 1994, Ukraine gave up the third-largest nuclear arsenal
in the world and signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty, having
received assurances that its sovereignty would be respected and
secured by Russia, the United States, and the United Kingdom. Based
on original and heretofore unavailable documents, Yuri Kostenko’s
account of the negotiations between Ukraine, Russia, and the US
reveals for the first time the internal debates of the Ukrainian
government as well as the pressure exerted upon it by its
international partners. Kostenko presents an insider’s view on
the issue of nuclear disarmament and raises the question of whether
the complete and immediate dismantlement of the country’s
enormous nuclear arsenal was strategically the right decision,
especially in view of the 2014 annexation of Crimea by Russia, one
of the guarantors of Ukraine’s sovereignty under
denuclearization.
In December 1994 Ukraine gave up the third-largest nuclear arsenal
in the world and signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty, having
received assurances that its sovereignty would be respected and
secured by Russia, the United States, and the United Kingdom. Based
on original and heretofore unavailable documents, Yuri Kostenko's
account of the negotiations between Ukraine, Russia, and the US,
reveals for the first time the internal debates of the Ukrainian
government, as well as the pressure exerted upon it by its
international partners. Kostenko presents an insider's view on the
issue of nuclear disarmament and raises the question of whether the
complete and immediate dismantlement of the country's enormous
nuclear arsenal was strategically the right decision, especially in
view of the 2014 annexation of Crimea by Russia, one of the
guarantors of Ukraine's sovereignty under denuclearization.
Of the hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian women were sentenced to
the Gulag in the 1940s and 1950s, only half survived. In Survival
as Victory, Oksana Kis has produced the first anthropological study
of daily life in the Soviet forced labor camps as experienced by
Ukrainian women prisoners. Based on the written memoirs,
autobiographies, and oral histories of over 150 survivors, this
book fills a lacuna in the scholarship regarding Ukrainian
experience. Kis details the women's resistance to the brutality of
camp conditions not only through the preservation of customs and
traditions from everyday home life, but also through the frequent
elision of regional and confessional differences. Following the
groundbreaking work of Anne Applebaum's Gulag: A History (2003),
this book is a must-read for anyone interested in gendered
strategies of survival, accommodation, and resistance to the
dehumanizing effects of the Gulag.
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