Hostname: page-component-7c8c6479df-8mjnm Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-03-28T08:47:46.770Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Geographical value spaces and gender norms in post-Maidan Ukraine: the failed ratification of the Istanbul Convention

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 October 2019

Elise Ketelaars*
Affiliation:
Transitional Justice Institute, University of Ulster
*
*Corresponding author. Email: Ketelaars-E@ulster.ac.uk

Abstract

With RRW populist actors’ discovery of gender norms as a useful foreign policy tool, narratives constructed in terms of geographical value spaces have become central to the struggle for women's rights. Through a detailed examination of international and domestic actors’ engagement with the failed ratification process of the Istanbul Convention in Ukraine, this article aims to enhance understanding of the appropriateness of the use of these geographical value spaces when describing the struggle to combat GBV in Ukraine, and how connecting gender justice issues to geographically restricted value spaces impacts this fight. It finds that in practice neither the EU – despite Russia's allegations to the contrary – nor domestic political elites in favour of closer cooperation with Europe have provided meaningful support to the ratification of the Istanbul Convention. Faced with this situation, some Ukrainian feminists have increasingly sought to present the struggle to combat gender-based violence in a locally acceptable vernacular. This article, however, concludes that framing the struggle for women's rights in any type of geographical terms – be they of an international or domestic nature – increases the risk of either instrumentalisation of or selective engagement with the feminist agenda.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Sergunin, Alexander and Karabeshkin, Leonid, ‘Understanding Russia's soft power strategy’, Politics, 35:3–4 (2015), pp. 347–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

2 Wilson, Jeanne, ‘Russia and China respond to soft power: Interpretation and readaptation of a Western construct’, Politics, 35:3–4 (2015), pp. 287300CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Katarzyna Kaczmarska, ‘Conservative soft power: Liberal soft power bias and the “hidden” attraction of Russia’, Journal of International Relations and Development (2017); Cooley, Alexander, ‘Countering democratic norms’, Journal of Democracy, 26:3 (2015), pp. 4963CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Horvath, Robert, ‘The reinvention of “traditional values”: Nataliya Narochnitskaya and Russia's assault on universal human rights’, Europe-Asia Studies, 68:5 (2016), pp. 868–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Tsygankov, Andrei P., Russia's Foreign Policy: Change and Continuity in National Identity (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2016), p. 233Google Scholar; Melisa Hooper, ‘Russia's “Traditional Values” Leadership’, The Foreign Policy Centre (24 May 2016), available at: {https://fpc.org.uk/russias-traditional-values-leadership/} accessed 10 January 2019; Bluhm, Katharina and Varga, Mihai, New Conservatives in Russia and East Central Europe (London: Routledge, 2018)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

3 Elżbieta Korolczuk, ‘“The war on gender” from a transnational perspective: Lessons for feminist strategising’, Anti-Gender Movements on the Rise? Strategising for Gender (2014), p. 43; O'Dwyer, Conor, Coming Out of Communism: The Emergence of LGBT Activism in Eastern Europe (New York: New York University Press, 2018)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kristina Stoeckl and Kseniya Medvedva trace back Russia's norm entrepreneurship through the United Nations Human Rights Council to the agenda set by the Russian Orthodox Church. Stoeckl, Kristina and Medvedeva, Kseniya, ‘Double bind at the UN: Western actors, Russia, and the traditionalist agenda’, Global Constitutionalism, 7:3 (2018), pp. 383421CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Anne Marie Goetz, ‘The New Cold War on Women's Rights?’, Let's Talk about Women's Rights: 20 Years after the Bejing Platform for Action, UNRISD (2015), available at: {http://www.unrisd.org/beijing+20-goetz} accessed 14 January 2019; Elise Ketelaars, ‘When “European values” do not count: Anti-gender ideology and the failure to comprehensively address GBV in Ukraine’, LSE Engenderings blog (2018), available at: {http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/gender/2018/09/26/when-european-values-do-not-count-anti-gender-ideology-and-the-failure-to-comprehensively-address-gbv-in-ukraine/} accessed 27 January 2019; Alicija Curanović and Lucian N. Leustean, ‘The Guardians of Traditional Values: Russian and the Russian Orthodox Church in the Quest for Status’, Transatlantic Academy Paper Series, No. 1 (2015); Kristina Stoeckl, ‘Transnational Norm Mobilization: The World Congress of Families in Georgia and Moldova’, The Foreign Policy Centre (18 July 2018), available at: {https://fpc.org.uk/transnational-norm-mobilization-the-world-congress-of-families-in-georgia-and-moldova/} accessed 27 January 2019.

4 These actors are EU officials, Ukrainian women's rights activists, and representatives of international organisations working on gender issues in Ukraine.

5 Paternotte, David and Kuhar, Roman, ‘Disentangling and locating the “global right”: Anti-gender campaigns in Europe’, Politics and Governance, 6:3 (2018), pp. 619CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

6 Kuhar, Roman and Paternotte, David, Anti-Gender Campaigns in Europe: Mobilizing Against Equality (London and New York Rowman & Littlefield International, 2017)Google Scholar.

7 Clifford Bob's description of the global anti-gender movement as a ‘Baptist-burqa’ network aptly captures that anti-gender ideology has equally been espoused by the – Islamic – actors who are themselves the target of RRW populist organisations in Europe and the US. Scholars such as Verloo, who have focused on the link between gender and RRW populism in northern Europe, have found that in the European context not all RRW populist actors have embraced anti-gender ideology. In northern Europe in particular, RRW populist parties have actually come out in favour of LGBT rights and gender equality, in order to distinguish themselves from the populations that they have identified as existential threats to national identity, meaning people with a Muslim background. This means that the movement behind the promotion of anti-gender ideology is both broader than, as well as not inclusive of all actors that are generally understood to constitute the RRW populist movement. Based on these findings, Paternotte and Kunar have argued that scholars should avoid conflating rising RRW populism (in Europe) with the promotion of anti-gender ideology. See Bob, Clifford, The Global Right Wing and the Clash of World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012), p. 41CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Lange, Sarah de and Mügge, Liza M., ‘Gender and right-wing populism in the Low Countries: Ideological variations across parties and time’, Patterns of Prejudice, 49:1–2 (2015), pp. 6180CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Verloo, Mieke, ‘Gender knowledge, and opposition to the feminist project: Extreme-right populist parties in the Netherlands’, Politics and Governance, 6:3 (2018), pp. 2030CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Paternotte and Kuhar, ‘Disentangling and locating the “global right”’, pp. 6–19.

8 Edenborg, Emil, ‘Homophobia as geopolitics: “Traditional values” and the negotiation of Russia's place in the world’, in Mulholland, Jon, Montagna, Nicola, and Sanders-McDonagh, Erin (eds), Gendering Nationalism (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), pp. 6787CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

9 In Poland RRW populist actors have described proposals to consolidate women's rights and gender equality as ‘Ebola from Brussels’. See Korolczuk, Elżbieta and Graff, Agnieszka, ‘Gender as “Ebola from Brussels”: the anticolonial frame and the rise of illiberal populism’, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 43:4 (2018), pp. 797821CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Similarly, Melisa Hooper has found that ‘Russians refer to Europe as Gayropa to emphasise its acceptance of altered gender roles and LGBT relationships that Russians deem “deviant”’. Hooper, ‘Russia's “Traditional Values” Leadership’.

10 Securitisation refers to the process in which issues that were previously not considered to concern a matter of national security, are constructed as ‘existential threats’. Wæver, Ole, Securitization and Desecuritization (Copenhagen: Centre for Peace and Conflict Research, 1993)Google Scholar.

11 Russian Federation Presidential Edict 683 approving appended text of ‘The Russian Federation's National Security Strategy’ (December 2015).

12 Stoeckl, Kristina, ‘The Russian Orthodox Church as moral norm entrepreneur’, Religion, State & Society, 44:2 (2016), pp. 132–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

13 The Russian Orthodox Church Department for External Church Relations, ‘His Holiness Patriarch Kirill Meets with Members of the Committee of Representatives of the Orthodox Churches to the European Union’ (8 October 2017), available at: {https://mospat.ru/en/2017/10/08/news151113/} accessed 27 January 2019.

14 Höjdestrand, Tova, ‘Nationalism and civicness in Russia: Grassroots mobilization in defense of “family values”’, in Fábián, Katalin and Korolczuk, Elzbieta (eds), Rebellious Parents: Parental Movements in Central-Eastern Europe and Russia (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2017)Google Scholar; Olena Strelnyk, ‘Conservative parents’ mobilization in Ukraine’, in Fábián and Korolczuk (eds), Rebellious Parents.

Oleg Marushchenko has described in detail the efforts of this movement to oppose the introduction of gender education in Ukraine: ‘One of the prime examples is the All-Ukrainian Parent Movement, a union of the non-governmental organizations and private persons with its educational activities, “Parents’ readings”, forums, brochures and newspapers promoting the so-called “traditional family values” and supporting the related upbringing system.’ What is particularly well known is the book Unembellished Gender [Gender bez Prikras] with the following subtitle speaking for itself: Through Gender Policy to Dictatorship of Homosexualism [Cherez Gendernuyu Poli ku k Diktature Homoseksualisma]. This movement allegedly produced yet another odious book for teachers and parents, Gender ‘Education’, or How They Will Make Homosexualists from Your Children [Gendernoye ‘Vospitanie’ ili Kak iz Vashih Detey Budut Delat Homoseksualistov], published in Ukrainian with no identification data. Large numbers of both books were sent out to the state departments for education, schools, and preschool institutions in the country. Oleg Marushchenko, ‘In Between Cultural Traditions and Reactionary Threats: Is Gender Education Possible in Ukraine?’, Materials of the Second International Gender Workshop: ‘Overcoming Backlash: Experiences of Ukraine, Belarus, Russia, Georgia, Armenia and Poland’ (2013).

15 Council of Europe, The Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence (November 2014), available at: {https://www.refworld.org/docid/548165c94.html} accessed 3 August 2019.

16 Grans, Lisa, ‘The Istanbul Convention and the positive obligation to prevent violence’, Human Rights Law Review, 18:1 (2018), pp. 133–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

17 Russia is one of only two Council of Europe states that has not even signed the Istanbul Convention. The other one is Azerbaijan. See Council of Europe, Chart of Signatures and Ratifications of Treaty 210, available at: {https://www.coe.int/en/web/conventions/full-list/-/conventions/treaty/210/signatures} accessed 19 January 2019.

18 Russian Orthodox Church Representation to the European Institutions, ‘Statement of the Committee of Representatives of the Orthodox Churches to the European Union on the Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence Against Women and Domestic Violence (Istanbul Convention)’ (2018), available at: {http://www.orthodoxru.eu/index.php?content=article&category=news&id=2018-07-13-1&lang=en} accessed 27 January 2019.

19 Sakwa, Richard, Frontline Ukraine: Crisis in the Borderlands (London: I. B. Tauris 2014)Google Scholar.

20 von Burgsdorff, Erik Kuhn, ‘The Euromaidan revolution in Ukraine: Stages of the Maidan movement and why they constitute a revolution’, Inquiries Journal, 7:2 (2015)Google Scholar.

21 ‘Nothing can stand between Ukraine and its European Ambitions’, UNIAN (10 July 2018), available at: {https://www.unian.info/politics/10182074-nothing-can-stand-between-ukraine-and-its-european-ambitions-poroshenko.html} accessed 27 January 2019.

22 Kostiantyn Yelisieiev, ‘Ukraine to EU: Tell us what we're fighting for’, EUobserver (15 November 2017), available at: {https://euobserver.com/opinion/139873} accessed 27 January 2019. See also EU Neighbours East, ‘Perceptions of the European Union in Eastern Partnership Countries’, available at: {https://www.euneighbours.eu/sites/default/files/publications/2017-08/EU%20Neighbours%20East_Factsheets_2016_REGIONAL%20OVERVIEW.pdf} accessed 27 January 2019.

23 Kunz, Rahel and Maisenbacher, Julia, ‘Women in the neighbourhood: Reinstating the European Union's civilising mission on the back of gender equality promotion?’, European Journal of International Relations, 23:1 (2017), pp. 122–44CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Stern, Maria, ‘Gender and race in the European security strategy: Europe as a “force for good”?’, Journal of International Relations and Development, 14:1 (2011), pp. 2859CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

24 Matthes Buhbe, ‘How Ukrainians Perceive European Values Main Results of an Empirical Survey’, Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (2017), available at: {http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/id-moe/13731.pdf} accessed 27 January 2019.

25 Guerrina, Roberta and Wright, Katharine A. M., ‘Gendering normative power Europe: Lessons of the Women, Peace and Security agenda’, International Affairs, 92:2 (2016), pp. 293312CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

26 European Commission, ‘Joint Statement by First Vice-President Timmermans and Commissioner Jourová Following the Council Decision on Signing of the Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women’ (11 May 2017), available at: {http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_STATEMENT-17-1268_en.htm} accessed 27 January 2019.

27 UNFPA data, for instance, show that while in 2016 174 women died as a direct result of the conflict, 601 were killed as a result of non-conflict related GBV. ‘Economic Costs of Violence against Women in Ukraine’, UNFPA (2017), available at: {https://ukraine.unfpa.org/sites/default/files/pub-pdf/Economic%20Costs%20of%20Violence_2017_3.pdf} accessed 27 January 2019.

28 OHCHR, ‘Conflict-Related Sexual Violence in Ukraine – 14 March 2014 to 31 January 2017’ (2017).

29 ‘Masculinity Today: Men's Attitudes To Gender Stereotypes And Violence Against Women’, UNFPA (2018), available at: {https://ukraine.unfpa.org/en/publications/masculinity-today-mens-attitudes-gender-stereotypes-and-violence-against-women} accessed 3 August 2019; ‘Gender-Based Violence in the Conflict-Affected Regions of Ukraine’, UNFPA and Ukrainian Centre for Social Reforms (2015), available at: {https://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/gbv_study_2015_final_eng.pdf} accessed 15 August 2018.

30 ‘Domestic violence now criminal offense in Ukraine’, UNIAN (7 December 2017), available at: {https://www.unian.info/society/2285764-domestic-violence-now-criminal-offense-in-ukraine.html} accessed 27 January 2019; Verkhovna Rada, ‘Law of Ukraine No 2227-VIII on Amending the Criminal and Criminal Procedure Codes of Ukraine with a View to Implementing the Provisions of the Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence [in Ukrainian]’ (6 December 2017), available at: {https://zakon.rada.gov.ua/laws/show/2227-viii/} accessed 15 August 2018.

31 Council of Europe, ‘The Istanbul Convention: A Tool to Advance in Fighting Violence against Women and Domestic Violence in Ukraine (2018–2020)’, available at: {https://www.coe.int/en/web/genderequality/the-istanbul-convention-a-tool-to-advance-in-fighting-violence-against-women-and-domestic-violence-in-ukraine} accessed 3 August 2019.

32 The Council of Churches is the representative organ of all Ukraine's Christian institutions.

33 ‘No to Gender: Council of Churches Speaks Out against Ratification of Istanbul Convention’, Union of Orthodox Journalists (7 March 2017), available at: {http://spzh.news/en/news/40019-no-to-gender-council-of-churches-speaks-out-against-ratification-of-istanbul-convention} accessed 27 January 2019.

34 Miriam Elder, ‘Feminism could destroy Russia, Russian Orthodox patriarch claims’, The Guardian (9 April 2013), available at: {https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/apr/09/feminism-destroy-russia-patriarch-kirill} accessed 27 January 2019.

35 Höjdestrand, ‘Nationalism and civicness in Russia’; Strelnyk, ‘Conservative parents’ mobilization in Ukraine’; Marushchenko, ‘In Between Cultural Traditions and Reactionary Threats’.

36 Strelnyk, ‘Conservative parents’ mobilization in Ukraine’, p. 78.

37 Interview with a Ukrainian feminist activist, Kiev, 29 November 2017.

38 Hatewatch Staff, ‘How the World Congress of Families Serves Russian Orthodox Political Interests’, Southern Poverty Law Center (16 May 2018), available at: {https://www.splcenter.org/hatewatch/2018/05/16/how-world-congress-families-serves-russian-orthodox-political-interests} accessed 27 January 2019.

41 Ukrainian Orthodoxy had been under the authority of the Russian Orthodox Church for centuries, but this move granted it independence from Russian interference. ‘“After autocephaly, there will be no Moscow spirit in Ukraine” – Patriarch Filaret’, UNIAN (23 November 2018), available at: {https://www.unian.info/society/10350051-after-autocephaly-there-will-be-no-moscow-spirit-in-ukraine-patriarch-filaret.html} accessed 27 January 2019.

42 President of Ukraine, Petro Poroshenko, Official Website, ‘Head of State: Church Autocephaly is the Most Important Event Similar to the Ukrainian Aspiration to Join the European Union and NATO’ (14 October 2018), available at: {https://www.president.gov.ua/en/news/glava-derzhavi-avtokefaliya-cerkvi-ce-najvagomisha-podiya-po-50450} accessed 27 January 2019.

43 Harriet Sherwood, ‘Ukraine-Russia tensions spark historic religious rift’, The Guardian (30 November 2018), available at: {https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/nov/30/ukraine-russia-tensions-religious-rift-orthodox-church} accessed 27 January 2019.

44 Volodymyr Yermolenko, ‘Does Poroshenko have a chance at a second term?’, Atlantic Council (1 October 2018), available at: {https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/does-poroshenko-have-a-shot-at-a-second-term} accessed 27 January 2019.

45 Emily Channell-Justice, ‘“We're not just sandwiches”: Europe, nation, and feminist (im)possibilities on Ukraine’s Maidan', Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 42:3 (2017), pp. 717–41.

46 Mykhailo Cherenkov, ‘Without Ukraine, there is no Europe’, New Eastern Europe (14 March 2016), available at: {http://neweasterneurope.eu/old_site/articles-and-commentary/1921-without-ukraine-there-is-no-europe} accessed 27 January 2019.

47 IPC, ‘Звернення Церков і релігійних організацій до українського народу’ (30 September 2013), available at: {https://www.irs.in.ua/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1281%253A1&catid=50%253Azv&Itemid=78&lang=uk} accessed 27 January 2019.

48 IRF, ‘333 NGOs From 9 States of Europe Initiate Amendments to the Istanbul Convention’ (22 March 2018), available at: {https://www.irf.in.ua/eng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=455:1&catid=35:worldwide&Itemid=62} accessed 27 January 2019.

49 Council of Europe, ‘II Ukrainian Women Congress – An Important Milestone for Promoting Gender Equality and Women's Rights in Ukraine’ (21 December 2018), available at: {https://www.coe.int/en/web/kyiv/-/ii-ukrainian-women-congress-an-important-milestone-for-promoting-gender-equality-and-women-s-rights-in-ukraine} accessed 27 January 2019.

50 Association Agreement between the European Union and its Member States, of the one part, and Ukraine, of the other part, OJ L 161 (29 May 2014).

51 According to EU officials in Brussels and Ukraine interviewed for this research: Interview with a SGUA representative, Brussels, 12 June 2017; Interview with a EUAM official, Kiev, 30 October 2017.

53 The EU has started to support the Kharkiv Regional Gender Resource Centre to provide ‘informal gender education [to] young people and women, with the aim of helping them to grow into “gender sensitive leaders” and become active in decision-making process at both the local and regional levels’. In view of the rejection of the Istanbul Convention being driven by hostility against the use of the term ‘gender’, support for this project seems to be important, but also rather late.

More information available at: {https://eeas.europa.eu/delegations/ukraine_me/49255/Centre%20of%20Gender%20Culture%20as%20a%20Platform%20for%20empowerment%20of%20women%20and%20youth} accessed 3 December 2018.

54 See European Commission, ‘Programming of the European Neighbourhood Instrument (ENI) – 2017–2020 – Single Support Framework for EU Support to Ukraine’ (2018–2020). This document contains the term ‘gender’ 47 times, and the term ‘women’ 13 times on a total of 29 pages, compared to virtually no mention of this term in relevant policy documents on Ukraine published before 2017.

55 Interview with the gender advisor for an international organisation active in Ukraine, Kiev, 6 November 2017.

56 Interview with the executive director of a Ukraine office of an international human rights NGO, Kiev, 24 November 2017.

57 Interview with a representative of a Ukrainian women's organisation, Kiev, 8 November 2017. Ambassador Marinaki made an appearance on a show of the Ukrainian radio station Hromadske Radio to talk about UNSCR 1325, and to emphasise the need for the Ukrainian parliament to ratify the Istanbul Convention.[57]

58 Interview with a Ukrainian feminist activist, Kiev, 29 November 2017.

59 Interview with EEAS officials working on Ukraine, Brussels, 19 June 2017.

60 Interview with a Commission official working on Ukraine, Brussels, 12 June 2017.

61 Interview with an EU official, EU Delegation Ukraine, Kiev, 8 November 2017.

62 Schengen Visa Info, ‘Over Half Million Ukrainians Visit EU since Visa Free Travel Launch’ (12 June 2018), available at: {https://www.schengenvisainfo.com/news/over-half-million-ukrainians-visit-eu-since-visa-free-travel-launch/} accessed 27 January 2019.

63 Interview with EEAS officials working on Ukraine, Brussels, 19 June 2017.

64 Channell-Justice, ‘“We're not just sandwiches”’.

67 Khromeychuk, Olesya, ‘Negotiating protest spaces on the Maidan: a gender perspective’, Journal of Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics, 2:1 (2016), final pageGoogle Scholar.

68 Tamara Martsenyuk, Ganna Grytsenko, and Anna Kvit, ‘The “Invisible Battalion”: Women in ATO Military Operations in Ukraine’ (2016).

69 Martsenyuk, Tamara, ‘Gender issues in Ukraine: Were the EuroMaidan protests patriarchal or egalitarian?’, in Anti-Gender Movements on the Rise? Strategising for Gender Equality in Central and Eastern Europe (Heinrich Boll Stiftung, 2015)Google Scholar.

70 Martsenyuk, Grytsenko, and Kvit, ‘The “Invisible Battalion”’.

72 Enloe, Cynthia, Maneuvers: The International Politics of Militarizing Women's Lives (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000)Google Scholar.

73 Mariya Mayerchyk, ‘Do vos'moho bereznia/Pro pereplavku smysliv [On the occasion of March 8/recasting of meanings]’, Krytyka (8 March 2014), available at: {http://krytyka.com/ua/community/blogs/do-8-bereznya-pro-pereplavku-smysliv} cited by Channell-Justice, ‘“We're not just sandwiches”’, p. 731. See also Maria Mayerchyk and O. Plahotnik, ‘Ukrainian feminism at the crossroad of national, postcolonial, and (post) Soviet: Theorizing the Maidan events 2013–2014’, Krytyka (2015).

74 A critique voiced by two representatives of an international women's rights NGO active in Ukraine. Interview with an international women's rights NGO, 30 May 2017, via Skype; Mila O'Sullivan, ‘“Being strong enough to defend yourself”: Untangling the Women, Peace and Security agenda amidst the Ukrainian conflict’, International Feminist Journal of Politics (2019).

75 Interview with a Ukrainian feminist activist, Kiev, 29 November 2017; Interview with a Ukrainian representative of an international organisation working on GBV, Kiev, 16 November 2017.

76 Interview with a Ukrainian feminist activist, Kiev, 29 November 2017.

77 Interview with a Ukrainian representative of an international organisation working on GBV, Kiev, 16 November 2017; Interview with a Ukrainian representative of an international organisation working on GBV, Kiev, 11 November 2017. This interviewee, for instance, stated: ‘Our main idea is even if Istanbul Convention is not ratified by the end of the year, and probably it won't be ratified, still we have other components of our projects which can somehow add value to the potential opportunity to the ratification of this Convention.’

78 Ukraine Crisis Media Centre, ‘National Police: Pilot Mobile Groups to Counter Domestic Violence Start Their Work’ (12 June 2017), available at: { http://uacrisis.org/57363-anti-domestic-violence-mobile-groups} accessed 20 June 2019.

79 Interview with a representative of a Ukrainian women's organisation, Kiev, 8 November 2019.

80 Interview with a Ukrainian feminist activist, Kiev, 14 November 2017.