Editorial Foreword

Belarusian Yearbook 2023 presents a comprehensive analysis of developments in the key segments of the state and society in the year 2022, which served as a transition from the political crisis of 2020 in Belarus toward the global security crisis in the region. The large-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russian troops in February 2022, which developed into a protracted war, became a key factor affecting almost all spheres of life in Belarus.

The status of Belarus in this war is still disputed by various actors: from the accomplice of aggression to the occupied territory, and official Minsk insists on the status of the peacekeeper and the negotiating platform, although it does not deny the use of Belarusian territory by Russian troops to attack Ukraine. All these contradictions and their consequences are reflected in the texts of the authors of the Yearbook.

Main trends of the year:

Since 2003, the Belarusian Yearbook project has evolved as a joint endeavor of the Belarusian expert community to compile, conceptualize, and deliver a chronicle of Belarus’s contemporary history.

The Belarusian Yearbook 2023 was developed with the participation of independent analysts, scientists and experts from various research centers and universities, including: Chatham House, GLOBSEC, Belarusian Institute for Public Administration Reform and Transformation (BIPART), The Center for New Ideas (CNI), Center for Strategic and Foreign Policy Studies (CSFPS), Belarusian Economic Research and Outreach Center (BEROC), School Of Young Managers In Public Administration (SYMPA), Polish Institute of International Affairs (PISM, Poland), iSANS, Belarusian Council for Culture (BСC), European Humanities University (EHU, Lithuania), Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU, UK), National Technical University of Ukraine "Igor Sikorsky Kyiv Polytechnic Institute" (NTUU KPI, Ukraine), projects MediaIQ and «Kosht Urada» and Belarusian expert network “Our opinion”.

Some of the authors of the Belarusian Yearbook 2023 used pseudonyms, as they remain in Belarus and for other security reasons.

A few authors of previous Yearbooks did not have the possibility to take part in work on the Belarusian Yearbook 2023 due to be sentenced as political prisoners: Valeria Kostyugova (was included into the state list of terrorists; sentenced to 10 years for political analytics deemed a conspiracy with the aim of seizing power), Andrei Porotnikov (charged with espionage for his analytics ), Yahor Lebiadok (sentenced to 5 years for analytical interviews in independent media, later recognized as extremist). The authorities also recognized the analytics of the «Kosht Urada» project as extremist materials.

Analytics is not a crime! Freedom for authors of the Belarusian Yearbook and all political prisoners!