Soviet period In April 1968, Alexeyeva was expelled from the
Communist Party and fired from her job at the publishing house. Nonetheless, she continued her activities in defense of human rights. From 1968 to 1972 she worked clandestinely as a typist for the first underground bulletin
The Chronicle of Current Events devoted to human rights violations in the USSR. In February 1977, Alexeyeva fled from the USSR to the United States following a crackdown against members of
The Chronicle by Soviet authorities. She wrote regularly on the Soviet dissident movement for both English and Russian language publications in the US and elsewhere, and in 1985 she published the first comprehensive monograph on the history of the movement,
Soviet Dissent (Wesleyan University Press). In addition, after moving to the United States, Alexeyeva took up freelance radio journalism for
Radio Liberty and the Russian language section of the
Voice of America. In 1990 she published
The Thaw Generation, an autobiography that described the formation of the
Soviet dissident movement and was co-written with Paul Goldberg.
Return to Russia In 1989 she restarted the
Moscow Helsinki Group following its dissolution in 1982. In 1993, after the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, she returned to Russia, and she became a chairperson of the Moscow Helsinki Group in 1996. In 2000, Alexeyeva joined a commission set up to advise
President Vladimir Putin on human rights issues, a move that triggered criticism from some other rights activists. She has also criticized the law enforcers' conduct in
Ingushetia and has warned that growing violence in the republic may spread to the whole Russian Federation. In 2006, she was accused by the Russian authorities of involvement with
British intelligence and received threats from nationalist groups.
Strategy-31 From August 31, 2009, Alexeyeva was an active participant in
Strategy-31 – the regular protest rallies of citizens on
Moscow's
Triumfalnaya Square in defense of the 31st Article (On the Freedom of Assembly) of the
Russian Constitution. On December 31, 2009, during one of these attempted protests, Alexeyeva was detained by the riot police (
OMON) and taken with scores of others to a police station. This event provoked strong reaction in Russia and abroad.
Jerzy Buzek, the President of the
European Parliament, was "deeply disappointed and shocked" at the treatment of Alexeyeva and others by the police. The National Security Council of the United States expressed "dismay" at the detentions.
The New York Times published a front-page article about the protest rally ("Tested by Many Foes, Passion of a Russian Dissident Endures"). On March 30, 2010, Alexeyeva was assaulted in the
Park Kultury metro station by a man as she was paying respect to the victims of the
2010 Moscow Metro Bombings. At the
Lake Seliger youth camp, the
Nashi youth movement branded her "a Nazi" and an enemy of the Russian people. She died in a Moscow hospital on 8 December 2018. No cause was given. Alexeyeva's last words for publication were written to celebrate the seventieth anniversary of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, although she actually died two days short of that anniversary. She lamented the weakening of civil society through state propaganda and manipulation, and she drew attention to the weakness of legal culture and of democratic institutions in contemporary
Russia, as well as political cynicism and populism which - not just in Russia - treat carelessly the systems and institutions necessary to support human values. == Awards and prizes ==