101000 Moscow
B. Zlatoustinskii per. 8/7, kom. 93
Tel: 095-206-81-71
Tel: 095-206-85-07
Fax: 095-921-12-09
E-mail: [email protected]
The Moscow Helsinki Group is the oldest human rights organization in Russia, dating back to 1976. Originally formed as a loosely connected network of human rights monitors across the Soviet Union, the numerous Helsinki groups and associations advocate human rights according to the provisions of “Basket Three” of the Helsinki Accords, signed in 1975. In the first three years of the group’s work, nearly all of its members were arrested and/or sentences to psychiatric hospitalization as a way to repress their activities. Today the Moscow Helsinki Group, together with related Helsinki groups and associations across the NIS, play an important leadership role in uniting human rights activists in the regions. The Board of Directors for the Moscow Helsinki Group is an impressive collection of the most famous dissidents and activists in Russia. Their names carry significant influence in Russian politics and society, as well as in the international human rights community.
The group’s work recently focuses on building human rights infrastructure through legal education and enhanced communications networks among groups. Technical specialist Andrei Tsyurusin observed:
One of the main products of this project has been the creation of a human rights database, containing contact information on groups as well as a description of their activities. It also includes relevant NGOs and political commissions and personalities which might be of interest or use to human rights groups in the regions. Tsyurusin notes, The database is not just a simple documentation of who and where these groups are, but it also contains information about the type of work that these groups are doing. We are trying to create the database so that it can be used effectively by the groups in the regions.
Publications:
The following publications were produced from the materials collected from the seminar series "Legal Culture" conducted by the Moscow Helsinki Group. Future books resulting from this ongoing series of seminars are planned for release in 1996.
The NIS Third Sector Organization section is based on information found in the print edition of "The Post-Soviet Handbook." For more information on the Handbook and instructions on how to order, see our
Post Soviet Handbook Information page.
Sponsored by:
Center for Civil Society International
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This section is accessible from the CCSI's Home Page: http://www.friends-partners.org/~ccsi/