steadily. In 2007, 141 political parties and 2,678 
public organizations were registered in Ukraine, 
of which 2,086 had an all-Ukrainian status and 
592  an  international  one  (Osaulenko,  2008,                   
p.  22).  As  of  January  1,  2011,  185  political 
parties  and  3,344  public  organizations  were 
already registered in Ukraine, of which 2,619 had 
an all-Ukrainian status and 725 an international 
one (Osaulenko, 2011, p. 22). In total, in 2010 the 
number  of  all  non-governmental  organizations 
was about 52 thousand. 
 
 In  general,  in  2010  the  Civil  Society 
Organizations Sustainability Index (CSOSI) was 
3.5. It was higher than the index of former post-
Soviet countries, except for the Baltic countries 
(Lithuania,  Latvia,  Estonia).  For  example,  in 
Armenia  it  was  4.0,  in  Azerbaijan  –  4.7,  in 
Belarus – 5.9, in Georgia and Moldova – 4.2, in 
Russia –  4.3,  while  in  Estonia  –  2.0 (USAID, 
2010, p. 4).  
 
At  the  end  of  2010,  Viktor  Yanukovych  was 
elected the new President of Ukraine. On the one 
hand, in the first years of Viktor Yanukovych's 
presidency  there  was  a  positive  trend  of 
cooperation  between  the  government  and  civil 
society. The slogan of his election campaign is “I 
will hear everyone!” contributed to the spread of 
faith in society in the further development of civil 
society, and Viktor Yanukovych himself at the 
beginning of his presidency repeatedly stressed 
the  need  for  cooperation  between  government 
and civil society. At least outwardly  it  was so 
perceived by society. On the other hand, at the 
beginning  of  his  term,  he  began  a  gradual 
concentration  of  power  in  his  hands,  which  in 
turn negatively affected the functioning of civil 
society in the future. Already in April 2010, two 
months after Yanukovych was elected president, 
former PACE Co-Rapporteur on Ukraine Hanne 
Severinsen was struck by the level of coagulation 
of  democracy  in  Ukraine  (Ukrinform,  2010). 
Here it is worth mentioning the words J. Keane: 
“The birth and revival of civil society is always 
associated  with  dangers.  It  grants  freedom  to 
despots  and  democrats  equally”  (Keane,  2000,               
р. 51). During this period, the main shortcomings 
of the young democracy were clearly manifested: 
the  immaturity  of  the  democratic  political 
system, the lack of a system of deterrence against 
the  usurpation  of  power,  and  the  weakness  of 
civil  society  institutions.  However,  we  fully 
agree  with  the  view  that  resistance  to 
authoritarianism has already been embedded in 
the political consciousness of Ukrainian society 
and “this is a bottom-up phenomenon, spurred on 
by Ukraine’s vibrant civil society, the rising class 
of independent journalists and local activists who 
have strengthened their  voice  and  power  since 
the Orange revolution” (Jarabik & Shapovalova, 
2010,  p.  2).  In  our  opinion,  the  Maidan 
phenomenon should be considered as a form of 
civil disobedience of civil society in a democratic 
society.  This  is  what  Jean  L.  Cohen,                       
Andrew Arato considered possible and desirable 
for  radical  institutional  reforms.  They  thought 
“сivil  disobedience,  aimed  at  further 
democratization  of  the  institutions  of 
constitutional  democracy,  strengthens  the 
principles  of  majority  rule”  (Cohen  &  Arato, 
2003, p. 519, 546). 
 
At  the  beginning  of  his  presidency,  Viktor 
Yanukovych  repeatedly  stressed  the  need  for 
cooperation  between  the  government  and  civil 
society. However, in our deep conviction, since 
2012, cooperation and the level of trust between 
third sector institutions and public authorities has 
significantly  decreased,  which  later  led  to  a 
political crisis, new social upheavals, revolution 
and war.  
 
In 2013, on the basis of the Law of Ukraine “On 
Public  Associations”,  there  were  67,155  in  the 
republic, of which 409 had all-Ukrainian status 
(Kalachova,  2014,  p.  7).  The  increase  in  the 
number of public organizations is due to partial 
liberalization of the creation and registration of 
organizations.  On  the  other  hand,  Ukrainian 
society remained politicized. In general, citizens 
were poorly informed about the activities of the 
non-governmental  sector.  With  the  report  U.S. 
Agency for International Development in 2013 
only 15 percent of Ukrainians say that they know 
of  CSOs  that  are  active  in  Ukraine,  while  59 
percent say they do not know any, and a further 
19 percent said that they do not know what a CSO 
is (USAID, 2013, p. 230).  
 
Civil society reacted sharply to socio-economic 
problems  and  the  collapse  of  democratic 
processes.  In  addition,  the  most  active  public 
organizations,  whose  activities  were  aimed  at 
protecting democratic procedures and upholding 
the rights and freedoms of citizens, were formed 
at  the  expense  of  international  and  private 
donors. 
 
With  the  victory  of  the  Revolution  of  Dignity 
2013-2014, a new stage in the formation of state 
policy in the field of civil society development 
began.  It  is  connected,  first  of  all,  with  the 
legislative consolidation of Ukraine’s movement 
towards the European Union, where the role of 
civil society institutions in public administration 
is  extremely  high.  In  2016,  the  “Strategy  for 
promoting  the  development  of  civil  society  in