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Projects

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Peaceful Assemblies: Why Is Street Demo­cracy Needed?

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The conversation will be held in Ukrainian with sign language interpretation.
The conversation will be held in Ukrainian with sign language interpretation.
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From the Revolution on Granite to the most recent Revolution on Cardboard, we consciously choose democracy and go out into the streets again and again to defend it. What is the tradition and how does the freedom of peaceful assembly work in Ukraine? Why, despite all the risks, is it necessary during the war? How does our experience differ from that of other countries with unstable democracies, such as, for example, Sakartvelo, and what lessons should we draw from these stories?

On the occasion of the online release on DOCUSPACE of the film National Exams (from 11 September to 2 October) by Sakartvelo documentary filmmaker Giorgi Mrevlishvili, we will talk about the possibility for Ukrainians to be involved in the life of the state and influence decision-making every day, not only during elections. About how rallies and protests change society itself. And about how the authorities should respond so that, in their effort to protect national security and preserve unity, they do not reduce rights to a formality and slide into authoritarianism.

Participants

Oleksandr Pavlichenko

Director of the Ukrainian Helsinki Human Rights Union

Ivanna Malchevska

Coordinator of the OZON Monitoring Group at the Centre for Civil Liberties

Anastasiia Bahalika

Moderator, journalist and director of the Human Rights Department at the NGO Docudays

RIGHTS NOW! releases

After the festival in Kyiv, we continue online screenings of documentary films about human rights, as well as conversations about democracy and our role in creating social change.