Inna Bohoslovska

[citation needed] Her father was a member of the Soviet military and worked as a teacher at a local high school; her mother was a lawyer.

In 1982, Inna Bohoslovska graduated with distinction from the Kharkiv Legal Institute (nowadays called the Yaroslav Mudry National Academy of Law).

In 1989, Inna Bohoslovska undertook correspondence postgraduate study at the Institution of the State and Rights at the Academy of Sciences of the USSR.

However, her position concerning the influence of the state on the judicial system mismatched the then pro-Soviet ideology of the management of the institute, and she had to reject the invitation at the time.

Inna Bohoslovska was recognised in Ukraine as a successful lawyer in her own right, winning a majority of litigations and demonstrating her ability and willingness to be a creative, progressive thinker and a good understanding of economics and politics.

During pre-election campaign for the Verkhovna Rada Bohoslovska stood for election as a representative of the local constituency in a Kharkiv in the district in which she was born, went to school, and now lives with her family and daughter.

Departing on her initiated after filing an authorization petition to the speaker of parliament Volodymyr Lytvyn, she never received a positive reply.

[18] After the 2019 Ukrainian presidential election and on the eve of her 60th birthday, which she celebrated on August 5, 2020, she ended up in a clinic because of her intention to commit suicide.

Inna Bohoslovska