Foundation (1987) The Decree to launch VCIOM (All-Union in those times) was adopted at the July meeting of the
Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1987. The founders were VCSPS (All-Union Central Council of Trade Unions) and USSR State Committee of Labour. The first director was
Tatyana Zaslavskaya (academician). Zaslavskaya tells that the
Institute of Demoscopy (Federal Republic of Germany) headed by
Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann was taken as a model when establishing the Center. Grushin made many efforts in 1987–1988 to set up a network of sociological centers in the Republics of the USSR and regions of Russia. That made possible to conduct the first mass surveys on a representative samples among adults in November 1988; a year later these surveys became systematical. In 1988
Yury Levada together with his students (Lev Gudkov, Boris Dubin, Alexey Levinson and others) went to work in VCIOM (first as the head of the Theoretical Research Department and later – since 1992 as the head of the company). In an interview Yuri Levada talks about the first years of VTsIOM, refers to Tatyana Zaslavskaya (Татьяна Заславская) and Boris Grushin (Борис Грушин) as the founders of VCIOM in 1987 and states that he was invited by them to join VCIOM.
Growth, 1989–2003 VCIOM became widely respected for its objectivity and professionalism among academics and journalists in both the Soviet Union and the West. In the 1990s, the agency's polls gained a reputation for being very reliable. During this period VCIOM had conducted over 1,000 polls. Being the first sociological institution in the USSR (and Russia), VCIOM served as the cradle for numerous marketing and sociological centers of the country. In August 1989 Boris Grushin left VCIOM to establish his own organization studying the public opinion "Vox Populi - Glas Naroda" (People’s Voice). In 1992 the
Public Opinion Foundation (FOM) that was originally established as a Division of the Center for raising charity funds, separated from VCIOM. In 1999 VCIOM achieved scientific institute status.
Conflict (2003) Although VCIOM received no budget money and funded itself with private and public sector polling contracts (grants) from the breakdown of Soviet Union in 1992 to 2003, Levada had not addressed the fact that the polling agency remained a state-owned company as a FGUP (Russian abbreviation for: federal state
unitary enterprise). In 2003 the Ministry of Property of the Russian Federation decided to transform FGUP VCIOM to JSC "Russian Public Opinion Research Center", 100% share of which was to be held by the state. There still would have been no budget allocated for it from the state and the company was to continue its work based on financing from both private and public institutions. However this change was taken by Yuri Levada as an attempt to affect the outcomes of VCIOM studies. As a result, the previous VCIOM employees left the company and followed Yuri Levada to the new established non-governmental
Levada Center. A young political scientist, Valery Fedorov headed the office. Some sources note that he was close to the Administration of the President of the Russian Federation. VCIOM carried on research programs introduced by its previous staff and continued to publish the
Monitoring of Public Opinion journal; in 2003 former editorial board members began publishing a new journal called the
Public Opinion Herald. There is conflicting data about response from other Russian sociologists to the breakup of VCIOM. Some sources reported that every sociologist left with Levada while others claims they were silent, except for Grushin. The dispute over the legality of using the VCIOM brand in sociological community ended up in 2004 The
Federal Antimonopoly Service decided to give VCIOM the full right of use of the brand "VCIOM" and prohibited Levada-Center to use it. When asked about VCIOM management change during his visit to
Columbia University in the United States in September 2003, Russian president
Vladimir Putin was supportive of the change in management.
Present role as the state's main sociological research center The research priorities today are political ratings, social mood indices, governmental programs, and reforms. VCIOM still conducts research for the most significant Russian private and public institutions. The applied and pragmatic focus of research programs is expressed in a change in its slogan: "Information for success!" instead of the former "From opinion – towards understanding". ==Criticism==