Resilience and vulnerability of Ukrainians: The role of family during the war

Author:

Kostenko Andriana1ORCID,Semenov Volodymyr2ORCID,Osetrova Oksana3ORCID,Kubatko Oleksandr4ORCID,Nazarov Mykola5ORCID,Stepanov Vitalii6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Doctor of Political Science, Department of Psychology, Politology and Socio-Cultural Technology, Director of Center for Social Research, Sumy State University

2. Ph.D. in Public Administration, Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, Politology and Socio-Cultural Technologies, Sumy State University, Ukraine

3. D.Sc. in Philosophy, Professor, Department of Sociology, Social Work, Public Management and Administration, Oles Honchar Dnipro National University, Ukraine

4. Doctor of Economics, Dr.Sc., Professor, Department of Economics, Entrepreneurship and Business Administration, Sumy State University

5. Ph.D. in Political Science, Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, Politology and Socio-Cultural Technologies, Sumy State University, Ukraine

6. Ph.D. in Philology, Assistant Lecturer, Department of Germanic Philology, Sumy State University, Ukraine

Abstract

The full-scale russian invasion of Ukraine led to numerous physical and moral challenges. The paper aims to estimate the role of family as a social resilience driver in managing wartime challenges on a regional level. It used the online survey method based on Google Forms and online focus-group interviews in September-November 2022. Household members (1,089 respondents) of Kyiv, Lviv, Zakarpattia, Mykolaiv, Sumy, Chernihiv, and Dnipropetrovsk territorial communities were surveyed. Most respondents generally positively assess Ukraine’s prospects; 59% believe that the situation in the country will most likely improve. During war escalation, 67.2% of respondents waited for family support, and 48.8% helped their relatives, but relying on family support did not increase their safety expectations. In communities that did not increase their activity level in response to the war by one percentage point, the “feeling unsafe” responses increased by 1.8 percentage points, which means that an active civil position is also responsible for feeling safe (other things being equal) and increasing society’s resilience. At the same time, even in wartime, the indicators of social atomization are quite high, as 46.2% relied only on themselves and solved their problems independently, without anyone’s help. Therefore, developing family relations is one of the effective mechanisms for raising internal human resources to manage wartime challenges. AcknowledgmentThis study was supported by a project “Digital transformations to ensure civil protection and post-war economic recovery in the face of environmental and social challenges” (№0124U000549) and “Economic and energy security of Ukraine in the conditions of war and post-war reconstruction: disruptive technologies for sustainable development” (№0123U103593).

Publisher

LLC CPC Business Perspectives

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