ABSTRACT

In 2000 a beheaded journalist was found in a remote forest near Kyiv. The corpse led to a scandal when it was revealed that it was that of a journalist critical of the authorities. The President was heard on tapes, made covertly in his office, ordering violence to be undertaken against the journalist. The scandal led to the creation of a wide protest movement that culminated in the victory of democratic opposition parties in 2002. The democratic opposition, led by its presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko, fought a bitter and fraudulent election campaign in 2004 during which he was poisoned. Widespread election fraud led to Europe’s largest protest movement since the Cold War which became known as the Orange Revolution, known after the campaign colour of the democratic opposition.

This book is the first to provide a collection of studies surveying different aspects of the rise of the Ukraine’s democratic opposition from marginalization, to protest against presidential abuse of office and culminating in the Orange Revolution. It integrates the Kuchmagate crisis of 2000-2001 with that of the Orange Revolution four years later providing a rich, detailed and original study of the origins of the Orange Revolution.

This book was published as a special issue of the Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |26 pages

Ethnic Tensions and State Strategies

Understanding the Survival of the Ukrainian State

chapter |27 pages

Oligarchs, Tapes and Oranges

‘Kuchmagate' to the Orange Revolution

chapter |24 pages

Revolutionary Bargain

The Unmaking of Ukraine's Autocracy through Pacting

chapter |14 pages

Anti-Orange Discourses in Ukraine's Internet

Before the Orange Split