Bohdan Boyko

Bohdan Fedorovych Boyko (Ukrainian: Богдан Федорович Бойко; born 29 September 1954) was a candidate in 2004 Ukrainian presidential election. He was nominated by the Movement of Ukrainian Patriots. In 2000, he formed a third Rukh[1] within the Popular Movement of Ukraine aimed at reconciling the differences between the two opposing factions.[2] Before 2002 he was a national deputy of Ukraine. Since 2002 he has been chair of the People's Movement of Ukraine for Unity, which is one of the branches of former People's Movement of Ukraine of Vyacheslav Chornovil. He has never been a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

Biography

He was born on September 29, 1954 in the village of Pidyarkiv, Peremyshlyany district, Lviv region, USSR.

Education

  • Ivan Franko Lviv State University, Faculty of Economics (19711976), economist;
  • graduate student at the Department of Political Economy, Lviv University (19791982);
  • Candidate's dissertation "Efficiency of commodity turnover of means of production in the period of developed socialism" (1982).

Career

19821986 — Assistant Professor of Political Economy, Lviv Agricultural Institute.

19861990 — Art. Lecturer, Department of Philosophy and Political Economy, Ternopil Pedagogical Institute.

From 1990 — 1st Deputy Chairman of the Executive Committee, Ternopil Regional Council of People's Deputies.

Since January 15, 1992 — Chairman of the Executive Committee and Regional Council.

April 1992 — June 1994 — Chairman, Ternopil Regional Council of People's Deputies.

September 7, 1996 — April 20, 1998 — Head of the Ternopil Regional State Administration.

Since 1990 — co-chairman, chairman of the Ternopil regional council of the Movement.

1993 — co-chairman of the Ternopil Regional Council of the Movement.

19951999 — Deputy Chairman of the NRU.

19951997 — c. at. Chairman, Chairman of the NRU Secretariat.

References

  1. "New Rukh: Better than Two Old Ones?". Archived from the original on 8 December 2015.
  2. Day, Alan John; East, Roger; Thomas, Richard (2002). A political and economic dictionary of Eastern Europe. Psychology Press. pp. 454–455. ISBN 978-1-85743-063-9.


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