The project encountered serious setbacks associated with an inhospitable research environment in Russia, the COVID-19 pandemic and war on Ukraine. The challenges led to the rebalancing of the research focus away from the Russian Federation towards the non-Russian case study countries, but this opened new avenues for research. For example, the Estonian archives focused attention on the last two decades before the communist collapse and interviews with former prisoners and prison staff in Georgia provided unexpected insights into the specific features of the late Soviet prison in a peripheral location. Georgia became the site of the successful project film, originally planned for Russia. The rebalancing of research towards the non-Russian countries chimes well with the recent call for scholarship on Soviet communism to pay greater attention to the peripheries of the ‘Soviet Empire’.
An achievement of Gulagechoes is the collection of a large corpus of data, which will become available for other scholars’ use. This includes a unique corpus of over 300 hundred extended interviews with a diverse range of research participants and 20,000 archival documents. Using these various data, the project has identified the different trajectories of penal reform in the case-study countries following the collapse of communism and confirmed the salience of ethnicity in all, albeit at different times and under different circumstance. At all times, individual prisoners have had to make decisions about whether, and how, to express their ethnic identity, which, in turn, has affected their treatment, their relationships and views of the world.
The project met its target of academic publications and presentations at international conferences. It will continue to publish into the future. The project’s findings were presented at a final workshop in March 2024. Thirty-five scholars from different disciplines and fourteen countries were invited. The workshop is the basis for an edited volume, “Continuity and Change in the Multicultural Prisons of the Former Soviet Union, East Central Europe and the Balkans”. This will be first major collection comprehensively to examine the history and legacy of penal institutions in Russia, Eastern Europe, and the Balkans. Two other books are in the pipeline including a co-authored monograph on the former USSR and a monograph on Central Asia transnational prisoners.