Events

Past Event

Through Protest to Reform: Euromaidan & Decentralization in Ukraine

October 3, 2025
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM
America/New_York
International Affairs Building, 420 W. 118 St., New York, NY 10027 Marshall D. Shulman Seminar Room, 1219

Registration REQUIRED by 4pm on October 2, 2025 in order to attend this event.

Please join the Harriman Institute for a Director's Seminar by Anastasiia Vlasenko, Petro Jacyk Postdoctoral Research Scholar in Ukrainian Studies. Moderated by Jack Snyder, Acting Director of the Harriman Institute.

What happens when mass protests don’t just demand change, but actually reshape the way power works on the ground? This talk dives into that question through the story of Ukraine’s Euromaidan movement and the sweeping decentralization reform that followed. In the wake of Euromaidan, Ukraine undertook one of its most ambitious transformations: transferring authority, budgets, and decision-making from the central government to local communities. But here is the twist: different places embraced this reform at very different speeds. Why? And what did protest have to do with it?

Drawing on rich local-level data, this study uncovers a fascinating paradox: communities touched by protest often moved more slowly to adopt decentralization. However, once they did, they used it more effectively. The protest areas developed polycentric, multivoice decision-making structures that made early reform harder, but later implementation stronger, more competitive, and more participatory. From budget battles to e-democracy initiatives, this research shows how protest can leave behind more than memories. It can build the skills, networks, and civic muscle needed to turn reforms into real functioning democracy. Whether you are interested in Ukrainian politics, the afterlife of protest movements, or the mechanics of grassroots democracy, this talk offers fresh insight into how collective action can rewrite the rules of governance from the bottom up.

Contact Information

Eileen Huhn
(212) 854-6217