Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/37015
Appears in Collections:History and Politics Research Reports
Title: Mobilising Care for Cultural Heritage in Russia’s War Against Ukraine.
Author(s): Jones, Siân
Vonnák, Diána
Rasmussen, Josephine
Hardy, Samuel
Citation: Jones S, Vonnák D, Rasmussen J & Hardy S (2025) <i>Mobilising Care for Cultural Heritage in Russia’s War Against Ukraine.</i>. N/A. Stirling: University of Stiring. https://doi.org/10.34722/n9m2-tv84
Issue Date: 1-Mar-2025
Date Deposited: 24-Apr-2025
Publisher: University of Stiring
Abstract: This report provides an overview of key transnational networks, trends and challenges in the provision of care for cultural heritage in Ukraine between the 2022 Russian full-scale invasion and February 2025. Approaches to heritage protection in war have developed considerably over the last 20 years, as have the range of actors involved, extending beyond state administration and public bodies to diverse INGOs and NGOs. However, the complex networks and political economies involved in this crowded landscape are not well understood. It is increasingly recognised that cultural emergency responses intersect with humanitarian ones, but how this happens in practice is rarely explored. Without this understanding, calls for greater coordination and coherence, as well integration of heritage interventions with humanitarian ones, will be difficult to implement. Our research therefore aims to advance knowledge of how care for cultural heritage in war is mobilised through aid and capacity-building, alongside legal and regulatory frameworks, including civilian support and emergency responses. Based on extensive qualitative social research across Europe, the report identifies the actors, resources and reasoning involved, as well as the financial, political and practical contexts of their operation. We unpick the networks, supply chains and organisational alliances entailed, both inside Ukraine and among Ukraine’s allies, showing what actions are taken, by whom, and with what consequences. We also identify factors that facilitate or hinder how care is delivered in practice, particularly constraints that local professionals might face in their effort to shape the agenda of international support. Our results provide new knowledge about cooperation and collaboration in various phases of the war, and show how cultural heritage emergency response, humanitarian aid, and support for social cohesion and resilience, intersect in practice. Analysing care for cultural heritage in this broader, cross-cutting framework transforms understanding of both the social role of cultural heritage in wartime, and the true extent of the networks and resources involved. The Ukrainian example also powerfully illustrates the relevance of ongoing heritage and memory work in the pre-recovery phase with important wider implications for policy and practice. The overarching objective is to produce more effective and better coordinated support for projects and activities involved in caring for Ukraine’s heritage, and the professionals, activists and lay communities involved in them.
Type: Research Report
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/37015
DOI Link: 10.34722/n9m2-tv84
Rights: This uncorrected proof has been embargoed. It will be replaced by a final published version which will be availalbe under a CC BY-NC 4.0 licence.
Affiliation: History
History
History
Licence URL(s): http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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