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     MANUSCRIPTS and ARCHIVAL MATERIAL

Mr. S. – copies of interviews made by Russian journalists, in Russian, some are printed, 2022

 File — Container: MSS 2021-01a Box 25, Folder: 5

Scope and Contents

From the Series:

In 2021, members of the 1989 American delegation, some Soviet patients, Soviet doctors and other professionals, were invited to participate in the “Retrospective Review of the 1989 U.S. State Department Psychiatric Mission to the USSR” oral history project. Nineteen interviews were recorded, sixteen of them with the surviving members of the U.S. delegation, one with Andrei Kovalev, an official at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the U.S.S.R. at the time, and two with former “Soviet patients.” There is also an original 1989 recording of one interview.

These interviews provide a comprehensive overview of the history of Soviet psychiatric abuse, the reasons why psychiatric diagnosis was used to suppress dissent, the methods, medical and legal procedures, and who were the major players in Soviet psychiatric abuse. Emphasis is also made on assessing the U.S.-Soviet relationship in the 1980s and the special place that the 1989 State Department psychiatric mission to the U.S.S.R. held in the détente. All stages of negotiations and preparations for the mission were discussed as well as the methodology of psychiatric evaluations and the findings of the American experts. An additional emphasis was also made on assessing the state of Soviet psychiatric care as of the late 1980s and all the significant changes it was going through at the time. The role of World Psychiatric Association (WPA), the All-Union Society of Psychiatrists and Narcologists, the American Psychiatric Association and other important organizations, is also given proper attention. The interviewees also discuss the long-term impact that the 1989 U.S. mission made on Soviet and post-Soviet psychiatry.

Dates

  • Creation: 2022

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

This file contain sensitive information about the health or treatment of persons from the Soviet Union. The restrictions on access to these materials are outlined in the Conditions Governing Access note at the collection level of this finding aid.

Extent

From the Series: 138.5775 Gigabytes

From the Series: .25 Cubic Feet

Language of Materials

Russian

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Mr. S. sent the interviews to Olena Protensko in 2022.

Repository Details

Part of the Arthur J. Morris Law Library Special Collections Repository

Contact:
Arthur J. Morris Law Library
580 Massie Road
University of Virginia
Charlottesville Virginia 22903 United States