http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c80g3qwt No online items Register of the Vladimir Konstantinovich Bukovskiĭ papers Finding aid prepared by Hoover Institution Library and Archives Staff Hoover Institution Library and Archives © 2017 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-6003 [email protected] URL: http://www.hoover.org/library-and-archives Register of the Vladimir 2017C22 1 Konstantinovich Bukovskiĭ papers Title: Vladimir Konstantinovich Bukovskiĭ papers Date (inclusive): 1928-2011 Collection Number: 2017C22 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Library and Archives Language of Material: Russian and English Physical Description: 52 manuscript boxes, 4 card file boxes, 1 oversize box(24.5 Linear Feet) Abstract: Correspondence, writings, notes, reports, Soviet government documents, printed matter, and photographs relating to civil liberties in the Soviet Union, post-Soviet Russia and elsewhere, political conditions in post-Soviet Russia, and promotion of international democracy. Creator: Bukovskiĭ, Vladimir Konstantinovich, 1942- Hoover Institution Library & Archives Access The collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Library & Archives. Acquisition Information Materials were acquired by the Hoover Institution Library & Archives in 2017. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Vladimir Konstantinovich Bukovskiĭ papers, [Box no., Folder no. or title], Hoover Institution Library & Archives. 1942 Born, Belebey, Bashkir ASSR, Soviet Union. 1960 Entered Moscow University to study biology. 1961 Wrote his critical notes on the Communist Youth League (Komsomol) and was expelled from the university. 1963-1965 Arrested, charged with "anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda," and sent for treatment at the Special Psychiatric Hospital in Leningrad. 1965 Helped to organize a demonstration on Pushkin Square in central Moscow to protest against the trial of the writers Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel (Glasnost rally). 1965-1966 Arrested, charged with organizing the demonstration, and kept in various psychiatric hospitals. 1967-1970 Advocated for the right to organize demonstrations and other public protests, arrested, and sentenced to three years in an "ordinary regime" corrective-labor camp. 1971 Managed to smuggle to the West over 150 pages documenting abuse of political prisoners in psychiatric institutions in the Soviet Union. 1972 Accused of slandering Soviet psychiatry, contacts with foreign journalists, and the possession and distribution of Samizdat. Sentenced to two years in prison, five in a labor camp, and five more in internal exile. 1976 Deported from the USSR and exchanged by the Soviet government for the imprisoned general secretary of the Communist Party of Chile, Luis Corvalán, at Zürich airport. Settled in Great Britain, Cambridge. 1978 Gained a master's degree in Biology at Cambridge University. 1978 Author, To Build a Castle: My Life as a Dissenter. 1983 Co-founded Resistance International, along with Cuban dissident Armando Valladaresand, and was later elected a president of the organization. 1985 Resistance International expanded into the American Foundation for Resistance International. 1987 Author, To Choose Freedom 1991 Visited Moscow for the first time since his deportation fifteen years prior. His Soviet-era convictions were annulled by a decree of the RSFSR Supreme Court and his Russian citizenship was restored. 1992 Nominated aa a candidate for elections of Mayor of Moscow. 1996 Author, Judgment in Moscow: Soviet Crimes and Western Hypocrisy 1998 Director of the Gratitude Fund. 2006 Accused Vladimir Putin of the assassination of Aleksander Litvinenko. 2004 Co-founded the Committee 2008 for free and fair presidential elections in 2008, with Garry Kasparov, Boris Nemtsov, Vladimir V. Kara-Murza, and others. 2001 Received the Truman-Reagan Medal of Freedom. Elected President of the Comitatus pro Libertatibus – Comitati per le Libertà – Freedom Committees in Florence. 2007 Officially nominated to run for president in the 2008 Russian presidential election. Register of the Vladimir 2017C22 2 Konstantinovich Bukovskiĭ papers 2009 Joined the council of the new Solidarnost' coalition. 2014 Author, Putin's Secret Empire: Will There Be a "Palace Coup"? 2015 Accused Vladimir Putin of the assassination Boris Nemtsov. 2018 Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C. Member of the International Council of the Human Rights Foundation Director of the Gratitude Fund Member of the international advisory council for the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation Scope and Content of Collection The papers of Vladimir Konstantinovich Bukovskiĭ (Bukovsky) document his activities from 1983 to 2004 and include biographical material; correspondence; writings by Bukovskiĭ, among them his conference papers; materials concerning publication of his books with related correspondence; and photographs depicting Bukovskii with other dissidents, political figures, family, and friends. The correspondence is mostly legal, relating to Bukovskiĭ's legal cases and in defense of other human rights activists (not only Russian/Soviet), and includes letters from Margaret Thatcher, Winston Churchill, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and others, and Bukovskii's letters to Boris Yeltsin. The International Human Rights Organizations File document Bukovskiĭ's involvement in various human rights organizations concerned with the treatment of dissidents. It includes materials from various organizations, such as Resistance International, National Endowment for Democracy, Center for Democracy, Freedom of Communication, Andrei Sakharov Institute, and Komitet soldatskikh materei (Committee of Soldiers' Mothers). The materials reflect the advocacy in defense and educational work by these groups, including statements and letters supporting dissident movements. In 1992, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, President Yeltsin's government invited Bukovskiĭ to serve as an expert witness at the trial of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) before the Constitutional Court. Russia's communists were suing Yeltsin for banning their Party and confiscating its property. To prepare his testimony, Bukovskiĭ was granted access to the documents from the CPSU Central Committee archives. He managed to scan many documents (some with high security clearance) secretly, including KGB reports to the Central Committee. The copies were then smuggled to the West and now they are available online at http://www.bukovsky-archives.net/ . A number of documents were extensively quoted and cited in Bukovskiĭ's Judgment in Moscow. The collection also includes copies of these archival materials. Subjects and Indexing Terms Russia (Federation) -- Politics and government -- 1991- Democracy Dissenters -- Soviet Union Civil rights -- Soviet Union Civil rights Biographical File 1976-2011 Scope and Contents Awards, curriculum vitae, financial documents, naturalization records, and publicity file, arranged alphabetically by physical form. Awards and honorary degrees, 1981-2011 General See also: Oversize Material, box 57. box 1, folder 1 "Human Rights Award," American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, 1981 box 1, folder 2 "Krieble Freedom and Democracy Award," Krieble Institute, circa 1990 box 1, folder 3 "Magyar Köztársasági Érdemrend Középkeresztje," Magyarország köztársasági elnöke, certificate, 2011 box 1, folder 4 "Pro Libertate Hungariae," World Federation of the Hungarian Freedom Fighters, certificate, 1981 box 1, folder 5 Curriculum vitae, circa 1990 Register of the Vladimir 2017C22 3 Konstantinovich Bukovskiĭ papers Biographical File 1976-2011 box 1, folder 6 Financial documents, 1978-1988 Scope and Contents Includes correspondence, statements, and reports. box 1, folder 7-8 Naturalization papers, 1988-1991 Scope and Contents Includes a guide for applicants, correspondence, and "Certificate of Naturalization as a British Citizen." Publicity file, 1976-1997 Scope and Contents Worldwide press clippings in chronological order. box 1, folder 9 1976-1979 box 1, folder 10 1982-1983 box 1, folder 11 1984 box 1, folder 12 1985 box 1, folder 13 1986 box 1, folder 14 1990-1993 box 1, folder 15 1996-1997 Correspondence 1976-2000 Scope and Contents Letters, postcards, invitations, and enclosures, arranged alphabetically by name of correspondent. box 1, General, 1976-1995 folder 16-17 box 54, folder 3, Invitation letters, postcards, and notes, 1980-1993 box 1, folder 18 box 1, folder 19, Unidentified, 1983-1996 box 54, folder 2 Scope and Contents Includes photographs. box 2, folder 1 Aban'kin, Vitol'd, 1990-1997 box 2, folder 2 Akifman, Galina, 1995 box 2, folder 3 Alekseeva, Liudmila, 1977-1983 box 2, folder 4 Alloi, Vladimir, 1987 box 2, folder 5 Almond, Mark, 1992 box 2, folder 6 Anastasi, Paul, 1988 box 2, folder 7 Arkhangelskii, Maksim, 1992 box 2, folder 8 Association for Free Russia, 1983-1984 box 2, folder 9 Bakhmin, Viacheslav, 1993 Scope and Contents Includes materials relating to the human rights activist Petro Grigorenko. box 2, folder 10 Banfi, Alessandro, 1985 box 2, folder 11 Baranov, Leonid, 1997 box 2, folder 12 Bax, Joss, 1993 box 2, folder 13 Bernstein, Lev B., 1992 box 2, folder 14 Besançon, Alain, 1995 box 2, folder 15 Betchell, Nicolas, 1991 box 2, folder 16 Boll (Böll), Heinrich Theodor, 1984 box 2, folder 17 Borovoi, Konstantin, 1992 box 2, folder 18 Bovy, J. M., 1986
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