Cover Image for Support Us

Support Us

With the support of our readers, the special publication of the Ukrainian Institute London has grown into a regular journal which covers the literature, art, politics, and history of Ukraine bringing the country closer to readers in the English-speaking world.

By becoming a donor of the London Ukrainian Review, you will help us produce attractive visual content to accompany textual materials and reach wider audiences. We will use your donations to enhance our communication and marketing efforts, and design the printed issue, which will collect the best writing published in the London Ukrainian Review during the year.

 

We are grateful to the following individuals who have supported our work through the publication’s precarious first years and helped us secure the journal’s future: Vasyl Myroshnychenko, Dennis Ougrin and Oksana Litynska, Artem Shevalev, Stanislav Suprunenko, Anna Morgan, Larissa Blavatska, Taras Nebeluk, Olia, Golnoosh Nour, Josie von Zitzewitz, Mykhailo Ziatin, Molly Flynn, Uilleam Blacker, Yuliya Komska, Ana Parejo Vadillo, Larysa Bolton, Georgia Clarke, Linda Gough, Oksana Jajecznyk, Ursula Phillips, Myrna Kostash, Mary Van Nortwick, Peter Bennett, and generous anonymous supporters.

 


Image: Odesa Sea Port. Photo by Yevhenii Chasovenko.


Cover Image for Justice for Ukraine

Justice for Ukraine

Issue 3 (2024)

This issue of the London Ukrainian Review is dedicated to justice. It explores how impunity for Russia’s crimes of the past breeds its genocidal war against Ukraine in the present. Ukrainians’ fight for justice is viewed from the standpoint of the Sixtiers and the Maidan generations, through the eyes of an art historian, lawyer, ex-serviceman, and Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

Sasha Dovzhyk
Cover Image for Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk: In Conversation

Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk: In Conversation

Issue 3 (2024)

Ukraine is at the forefront of envisioning justice in a changing world. While acknowledging the immense individual toll of Russia’s war crimes in Ukraine, Oleksandra Matviichuk sees possibilities for bringing war criminals to justice before the war ends, renewing the rule of law, and creating a future where justice can exist — if individuals do their part.

Maria Tumarkin, trans. by Larissa Babij