This paper addresses the growing visibility of LGBT civil society organizations in Ukraine’s
political sphere after the Euromaidan. Drawing on the data collected through in-depth, semistructured
interviews; participant observations; and an analysis of social media, this study
answers this question: How did Ukrainian LGBT groups reshape their political strategies after
the Euromaidan?
The Euromaidan was an anti-government, citizens’ protest that began in November
2013 in response to the government’s unlawful actions. During it, Ukrainian LGBT activists
strategically decided to keep their presence in the protest camp invisible. Though this helped
to avoid conflicts, the LGBT movement’s hopes for reforms in sexual minorities’ rights after the
Euromaidan remained unfulfilled. This article illuminates how the LGBT activists’ approach to
the public sphere in post-Euromaidan Ukraine has changed. It argues that the LGBT movement’s
disillusion over the new government’s lack of support triggered a wave of LGBT activism that
has resulted in new political strategies. Despite the visible backlash against sexual minorities in
2014–2015, Ukraine’s current turmoil has given the LGBT movement opportunities for political
alliances and transnational activism that have seemed to have borne fruit.