The activities of Soviet internal security agencies in Transcarpathia in 1944–1946
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II. Rákóczi Ferenc Kárpátaljai Magyar Egyetem
Анотація
Abstract. The aim of the study is to examine how Soviet internal security organs—principally the SZMERS,
NKVD/MGB and their ad hoc judicial auxiliaries—were deployed to restructure politics, society, and
religious life in Transcarpathia between late 1944 and 1946. We analyse the formation and practice
of extraordinary jurisdictions, the criminal-law toolkit imported from the Ukrainian SSR, and the
operational methods (arrests, investigations, show trials, extrajudicial violence) used to neutralize
perceived opponents and consolidate Soviet power. By situating Transcarpathia within broader postwar patterns east of the Elbe, we show how “internal security” functioned as the cutting edge of
annexation and regime change.
Objectives of the study. The study formulates the following objectives: (1) reconstruct the legal–
institutional architecture enabling repression (with special attention to the December 18, 1944 Decree
No. 22 establishing the Extraordinary Court at the People’s Council of Transcarpathian Ukraine); (2)
map the primary target groups and charge patterns; (3) document interactions between security organs
and ordinary courts/procuracy, including the transfer of prisons under security control; (4) assess
case-level outcomes for political elites and clergy; (5) interpret the security agencies’ role in elite
replacement and the integration of Transcarpathia into the Soviet administrative order.
Methodological approach. The article synthesizes archival records of the Transcarpathian
Regional State Archive (fond and opis citations), contemporary press, juridical texts, and memoir
literature from victims and clergy. Triangulating institutional decrees, indictments, and press
narratives with ego-documents allows us to differentiate constructed (fictitious-fact) from tendentious
(rule-abusing) show trials—both present in the region—and to relate legal form to coercive practice.
This mixed evidentiary base supports both a structural account of institutions and a prosopography
of targeted groups.
Scientific novelty. First, we offer a focused reconstruction of the Extraordinary Court as an
instrument of internal security rather than justice, led by a politically credentialed but legally
untrained chairman (Vasyl Rusyn), and positioned as a special collegium of the Supreme People’s
Court—thereby formalizing security priorities in a judicial idiom. Second, we show how the swift
extension (January 25, 1946) of the Ukrainian SSR Criminal Code—especially §54 (the analogue of
RSFSR §58)—standardized the repertoire of “counterrevolutionary” charges (treason, armed
uprising, anti-Soviet agitation, etc.) and routinized mass sentencing. Third, we link the
institutionalization of security control over carceral facilities to the downgrading of the procuracy and
courts to mere “order maintenance,” reframing adjudication as the execution of security decisions.
Опис
Teljes kiadvány: https://kme.org.ua/uk/publications/rol-bezpeki-v-transkordonnomu-ta-mizhnarodnomu-spivrobitnictvi/
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Бібліографічний опис
In Csernicskó István, Maruszinec Marianna, Molnár D. Erzsébet, Mulesza Okszána és Melehánics Anna (szerk.): A biztonság szerepe a határon átnyúló és nemzetközi együttműködésben. Nemzetközi tudományos és szakmai konferencia Beregszász, 2025. október 8–9. Absztraktkötet. Beregszász, II. Rákóczi Ferenc Kárpátaljai Magyar Egyetem, 2025. pp. 366-367.
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