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Information × Registration Number 0217U003906, 0116U006967 , R & D reports Title Regional identities of the South and East of Ukraine in the сontext of the сontemporary Russian-Ukrainian War popup.stage_title Head Shteinle Oleksii Fedorovych, Registration Date 12-09-2017 Organization Zaporozhye National University popup.description2 The object of the study is regional identities as the concepts of the place of the region in the national space concentrated on the values of systems in the national space and their behavioral patterns derived from the inhabitants of the southern and eastern regions of Ukraine during the second half of the XX - the beginning of the XXI century. The purpose of the work is to create a conceptual model of the evolution of regional identities of the population of the South and East of Ukraine from the completion of the formation of administrative outlines of the region in the middle of the twentieth century to the modern Russian-Ukrainian war. Methods of research - "total history" (deep integration of historical tools with the development of psychology, social philosophy, political science, cultural studies); сomparative-historical, retrospective, diachronic and synchronous methods, tools of oral history. Because of archival and library heuristics, an updated source base for the study of regional identities of the inhabitants of the southern and eastern regions of Ukraine was identified. For the first time, a number of unpublished documents from the funds of the Soviet authorities, the results of oral historiographical surveys, memories of the inhabitants of the region of the second half of the 20th and the beginning of the XXI century were introduced for scientific purposes. The methodology for studying political and cultural elites has been improved, adapted to the specifics of the region. An integral concept of formation and evolution of regional identities in the conditions of the late Soviet society was formed. It was revealed that the results of the Second World War had a significant influence on the development of local ideas in the South and East of the Ukrainian SSR. The victory over Nazism strengthened the communist regime in the USSR and contributed to the conservation of the results of the Stalinist "revolution from the top" of the late 1930s. The region has undergone unification according to the Soviet-style model: the government deliberately destroys the remnants of the "root-line" policy of the interwar years. The Crimean Tatars, Germans, Poles and Bulgarians, who ceased to play a prominent role in the life of the southern and eastern regions of the Ukrainian SSR, suffered the most. The policy of constructing a Soviet identity, which was supposed to become an ersatz-variant of national consciousness, is activated. The organization and qualitative composition of the regional elites of Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk and Zaporizhzhia of the late Soviet period was investigated. It was determined that in the second half of the twentieth century, these regions became centers for the formation and replenishment of informal groups of the Soviet elite in the form of fraternity. Local clans successfully survived the transformation period in the late 1980s and early 1990s and used social changes to preserve and strengthen their own status. This made them one of the main subjects of the design and evolution of regional identities of the South and East of Ukraine at the present stage. Product Description popup.authors Ігнатуша Григорій Олександрович Андрієвська Валерія Анатоліївна Буренков Віктор Миколайович Глушко Юлія Сергіївна Голощапова Євгенія Олександрівна Гретченко Анастасія Сергіївна Жманкова Яна Юріївна Звьоскін Юрій Дмитрович Каганов Юрій Олегович Михайлов Володимир Вікторович Сало Юрій Олександрович Супрун Анна Олексіївна Штейнле Олексій Федорович popup.nrat_date 2020-04-02 Close
R & D report
Head: Shteinle Oleksii Fedorovych. Regional identities of the South and East of Ukraine in the сontext of the сontemporary Russian-Ukrainian War. (popup.stage: ). Zaporozhye National University. № 0217U003906
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Updated: 2026-03-23