Bureaucracy as a Weapon: Why Iabluchanskyi's Fight for Medical Education Is a Story for Our Time
There are books that inform, books that inspire, and rare books that do something more difficult — they hold a mirror to the machinery of power and dare the reader to look without flinching. Mykola Iabluchanskyi's memoir of the revival of classical university medical education at V.N. Karazin Kharkiv National University belongs firmly in that third, rarer category. Written from personal experience and revised a quarter-century later with the wisdom of hindsight, it is a document that transcends its subject matter and speaks to every society still wrestling with the inheritance of authoritarianism. On the surface, the book appears to be an institutional history — the story of how a medical faculty was born, attacked, nearly strangled, and ultimately survived within a Ukrainian university during the turbulent post-independence years of the 1990s. But to read it only at that level is to miss its deeper architecture. This is, at its core, a study of how bureaucratic systems weaponize p...