Author(s) / Editor(s):
Reznik Volodymyr Stanislavovich, Doctor of Sciences in Sociology, Head of the Department of History and Theory of Sociology, Institute of Sociology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
email: volodymyr.reznik@gmail.com
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9955-0034
Year: 2024
Pages: 99–131
Publication language: Ukrainian
Publisher: Institute of Sociology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
Type of Publication: chapter in edited volume
Publication Place: Kyiv
DOI: TBD
Russian military aggression is structurally changing the active civil society in Ukraine and affecting the potential for social tensions and divisions in Ukrainian society. As a result of the Russian occupation of a number of territories in the South and East of Ukraine, their population is being largely removed from the socio-political space of Ukraine. The numerical ratio of different groups of Ukrainian citizens, socially separated due to different linguistic and geopolitical preferences, is changing. In 2014–2015 and 2021–2024, immediately after radical escalations of Russian aggression against Ukrainians, there was a growing disagreement with the possible increase in the status of the Russian language in Ukraine. In 2024, two social categories with distinct geopolitical preferences were recorded: 71.9% of citizens with Euro-Atlantic orientations and 28.1% of citizens with orientations toward the idea of Ukraine's foreign policy neutrality.
References:
Reznik, V. (2017). (De)legitimization of the social order and preferences for modernizing its foundations in modern Ukraine: prerequisites and trends. Sociology: Theory, Methods, Marketing, 1, 65–102.
Reznik, V. (2019). Responsibility of pro-Russian and pro-European oriented citizens. In V. Reznik (Ed.), Formation of a responsible society: state, political movements, business (pp. 149–172). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology of the NAS of Ukraine.
Vyshnyak, O. (2006). Socio-cultural dynamics of political regions of Ukraine. Sociological monitoring (1992–2006). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology of the NAS of Ukraine.
