Kipiani studies the history of the informal press in the former Soviet Union,[3] gathering examples of local newspapers in Museum-Archive of the Press.[4] He is also researching manifestations of extremism in media.[5]
The case of Vasyl Stus
In 2019, Vakhtang Kipiani's book "The case of Vasyl Stus" was published. The book evolves around the criminal prosecution of a Ukrainian poet, translator, literary critic, journalist, and an active member of the Ukrainian dissident movementVasyl Stus. It mentions one of the most prominent Ukrainian pro-Russian politicians – Viktor Medvedchuk. In 1980, during the final court hearings in the case against Stus, Medvedchuk served as Stus’ attorney. However, he did nothing to defend Stus and even admitted his alleged guilt. Medvedchuk also served as an attorney in cases against other Ukrainian dissidents, doing as little as in the Stus case.[6] Medvedchuk filed a lawsuit against Vakhtang Kipiani and a Darnytskyi District Court of Kyiv banned publishing of the book. It caused huge demand for the book, it reached more than 100 thousand copies that was a record number for non-fiction book written in Ukrainian. Then on October 19, 2020, the Kyiv Court of Appeals overturned the decision of the Darnytsia District Court of Kyiv to ban the distribution of the book.[7]
In October 2021 "The Case of Vasyl Stus" won the first place the all-Ukrainian informational and educational action "30 iconic books of our Independence" dedicated to the 30th anniversary of Ukrainian independence that gathered 267,815 votes cast by 34,797 Ukrainians.[1]