Viktor Sheynis | |
|---|---|
Виктор Шейнис | |
Sheynis on November 16, 2018 | |
| State Duma deputy | |
| In office 11 January 1994 – 18 January 2000 | |
| Congress of People's Deputies deputy | |
| In office 16 May 1990 – 4 October 1993 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1931-02-16)16 February 1931 |
| Died | 25 June 2023(2023-06-25) (aged 92) Moscow |
| Resting place | Khovanskoye Cemetery |
| Party | Yabloko |
| Other political affiliations | CPSU(until 1991) |
| Alma mater | Leningrad State University |
| Awards | Medal "Defender of a Free Russia" Hungarian Order of Merit |
Viktor Leonidovich Sheynis (Russian:Виктор Леонидович Шейнис; February 16, 1931, Kyiv,Ukrainian SSR – June 25, 2023) was a Soviet and Russian politician, economist, political scientist, and member of the Political Committee of the Yabloko Party. He held a doctorate in economics.
Born into a Jewish family, inKiev,Ukrainian SSR, he graduated from the History Department of Leningrad State University. In 1966, he earned his PhD in Economics from the Economics Department ofLeningrad State University, with adissertation titled "Portuguese Colonialism in Africa: Economic Problems and Development Trends in the Postwar Period".[1] In 1982, he earned his Doctor of Economics from theInstitute of World Economy and International Relations of theSoviet Academy of Sciences, with a dissertation titled "Economic Growth, Social Processes, and Differentiation of Developing Countries: Problems and Contradictions".[2] He is also a professor.[3][4]
From 1954 to 1957, he worked as a history teacher at Leningrad School No. 107. From 1957 to 1958, he was a graduate student at theInstitute of Oriental Studies of theSoviet Academy of Sciences.
In 1957, Sheynis, along with other authors, wrote the article "The Truth About Hungary," criticizing theSoviet invasion of Hungary. In 1958, he was expelled from theKomsomol and graduate school for this action.
From 1958 to 1964, he worked at theKirov (formerly Putilov) factory inLeningrad.[4]
From 1964 to 1975, he was a graduate student, then an assistant, and then an associate professor in the Department of Economics of Contemporary Capitalism at Leningrad University. He taught the economics of foreign countries. He was forced to leave his teaching position at the university due to political "unreliability."
From 1975 to 1977, he was a senior researcher at the Institute of Socio-Economic Problems of the USSR Academy of Sciences (Leningrad). From 1977, he became a senior researcher, leading researcher, and chief researcher at theIMEMO of the USSR Academy of Sciences (before being elected to the State Duma). Since 2000, he has again served as a chief research fellow at the IMEMO.
Since 1988, he has been a member of theMoscow Tribune [ru] club.
In 1990, hewas elected as aPeople's Deputy of the RSFSR for Sevastopol Electoral District No. 47 in Moscow after his rival, Igor Surikov, withdrew under pressure from the electoral commission. In 1991, he was an active opponent of theState Committee on the State of Emergency. From 1991 to 1993, he was a member of theSoviet of the Republic of the Supreme Soviet of Russia and Deputy Executive Secretary of the Constitutional Commission of theSupreme Soviet of Russia. At theCongress of People's Deputies of Russia, he was one of the organizers of the "Consent for Progress" faction»,[5] which generally supported Boris Yeltsin's policies but opposed the unconstitutional dissolution of parliament.[6]
On December 12, 1991, as a member of theSupreme Soviet of the RSFSR, he voted to ratify theBelovezha Accords on theDissolution of the Soviet Union.[7][8] From 1993 to 1994, he was Deputy Chairman of the Commission on Legislative Proposals under thePresident of Russia. He wasone of the authors of theConstitution of the Russian Federation.[9][10]
In theDecember 1993 parliamentary election, hewas elected to theState Duma on thefederal list of the Yavlinsky-Boldyrev-Lukin Bloc electoral association, of which he was one of the founders. He joined theYabloko faction and was a member of the Committee on Legislation and Judicial-Legal Reform.
In theDecember 1995 parliamentary election, hewas elected to the State Duma on the federal list of the Yabloko electoral association. He joined the Yabloko faction and was a member of the State Duma Committee on Legislation and Judicial-Legal Reform.
During the Soviet era, he was a member of theCommunist Party of the Soviet Union.[11] He later became a member of Yabloko. He was a theorist and practitioner of Russianparliamentarism.
On May 23, 2010, he participated as an observer in the parliamentary elections in the unrecognizedNagorno-Karabakh Republic, after which he was included by theMinistry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan onthe list of personae non gratae[12] for violating the "Law on the State Border" of the Republic of Azerbaijan; Baku considers the territories controlled by the NKR to be "occupied".[13] Sheynis himself commented on this fact: "I will survive this.".[14]
He died on June 25, 2023, at the age of 92, after a long illness.[15][16] He is buried in theKhovanskoye Cemetery.[17]
Viktor Sheynis wrote about his political experience:
The years spent in politics were the most interesting and, probably, the most controversial of my life. I regret almost nothing I did during those years. I'm glad we've settled accounts (even if incompletely and inconsistently) with one of the worst chapters of Russian history—Stalinism and its continuation—a period dubbed by the ridiculous euphemism "stagnation". I regret, however, the many things I and my political friends failed to accomplish. We lacked the wisdom (and sometimes just common sense) and strength to direct domestic economic development along a different path—like that taken by, say, Poland or Brazil. As a result, the country is where it is at the beginning of the new millennium. Much of this probably didn't depend on us.[18]
He was married to sociologist and PhD candidate in economics Alla Konstantinovna Nazimova (born 1932).[19]
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