Tamara Martsenyuk


Tamara Olehivna Martsenyuk is a Ukrainian sociologist and academic who specializes in gender studies.
She is known for her writing, her analysis of the role of women in the Euromaidan protests and for her critique of president Viktor Yanukovych's comments on women in Ukraine.

Early life

Martsenyuk is from Volyn and grew up in the Troieshchyna neighborhood of Kyiv, Ukraine.

Education

She has a PhD in sociology from the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy and studied at the University of Oslo.
She completed a scholarship at the University of Gothenburg, and a postdoctoral fellowship at Stanford University's Centre for Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies.

Career

Since 2004, Martsenyuk has worked at the department of sociology at Ukraine's National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy where she currently is an assistant professor focused on gender studies, feminism as a social theory and a social movement gender and politics, masculinity and men's studies.
She has taught in the US Canada, Germany, the United Kingdom, Finland, Estonia, Belgium, Lithuania, Hungary, Austria, Czech Republic, Poland.
Together with Maria Berlinska and other women, Martsenyuk launched the Invisible Battalion project in 2015 advocating for gender equality in the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

Views

Martsenyuk was critical of comments made by Viktor Yanukovych at the 2011 World Economic Forum meeting which she described as an endorsement of sex tourism in Ukraine.
Her co-authored paper Mothers and Daughters of the Maidan discussed the role of women in the Euromaidan protests, pointing out that the majority of protestors were women between late November 2013 and Early January 2014, prior to the subsequent escalations in violence and militarization. With Olga Onuch, she also reported the increasing influence of non-Ukrainians at the protests.

Selected publications

Books

Гендер для всіх: виклик стереотипам
  • ''Чому не варто боятися фемінізму?''

Academic writing

Genderna sotsiologiia Maidanu: Rol zhinok u protestah , http://ekmair.ukma.edu.ua/handle/123456789/3511.
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