Ukrainian Women’s Perspectives on Reconstruction

Ukrainian Women’s Perspectives on Reconstruction - Lessons from European Practices. A Qualitative Study of Grassroots Insights from Across Europe. Our team has just finished something truly meaningful - the first collective project of our association. It’s called “Women Rebuilding Ukraine with European Inspiration” (#WomenRebuildingUA). This project brings together stories and ideas from Ukrainian women now living across Europe — women who have seen, lived, and learned how strong local communities work. Their insights are simple but powerful: real reconstruction starts at the community level, with trust, inclusion, and small, concrete actions. I am very proud of our team and especially grateful to everyone who shared their experience.You can read more about the project and our findings here below. Let’s keep showing that Ukraine’s future is being built not only by institutions — but also by people who care, observe, and act. 💙💛 EADHC_UawomenDownload

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Svitlana Plotnytska – on rebuilding Ukraine

Today Svitlana Plotnytska shares her experience and ideas with us.Svitlana Plotnytska is a researcher at the GRANEM laboratory at IAE Angers, University of Angers, France. She is currently a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions4Ukraine fellow (2023-2025).With over 20 years of experience in management and marketing research, she is deeply passionate about enabling digital and artificial intelligence sustainability in digitalization transformation.Our traditional question is: how to bridge two worlds?Svitlana: as for me, it is important to meet the dual challenge of digitization and sustainability. How to combine digital technology and sustainable development for the benefit of health, equality and the environment?To understand this, we develop a challenging field - digital sustainability which refers to the effort of developing and deploying digitalization to secure sustainable economic growth while integrating sustainable objectives. We therefore need to understand how to enable this change, given the current lack of skills and knowledge on how to manage this…

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Adelaida Kovalkovska – on rebuilding Ukraine

Natalia Mishyna, one of EADHC founders, speaks: today I present one of my best friends Adelaida Kovalkovska. She is an electrophysicist (specialising in electroacoustics and ultrasound), now retired. Adelaida has 3 children, so she advises on youth and education.Before the war, Adelaida lived in the centre of Odessa and spent a lot of time doing sports and cultural activities. She was my main partner in crime when it came to the opera, ballet and other theatres. Now she lives in Ulm, Germany.Adelaida likes to see that children and young people in Germany have a very serious extracurricular education - in sport, music, art. The events for children and youth are always organised at the highest level with the participation of the best possible professionals (for example, in Odessa the ballets for children always use phonograms, never live orchestra - but in Germany there are spectacles with the orchestra, always with…

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Alla Fedorova – on rebuilding Ukraine

Today Alla Fedorova replies to our questions.Alla Fedorova is Associate professor of the Chair of Comparative and European Law of Educational and Scientific Institute of International Relations of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine.At present she is a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions 4Ukraine postdoctoral fellow (2023-2025) at the Faculty of Law of Palacký University in Olomouc, Czech Republic (2023-2025). She is infinitely grateful to the Faculty of Law of Palacký University Olomouc for a warm welcome and support that they offered her and her daughter.Alla answers:If I could bring one thing from Czech Republic as well as other EU States to help rebuild Ukraine, it would be their libraries for the Universities’ students.The ability to find almost all books, articles that you would like to read give the inspiration for the research and incredible motivation. Ukrainian Universities would need to think how to fill the libraries with well-known books, textbooks, journals and…

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Bohdana Ostrovska – on rebuilding Ukraine

Today we thank Bohdana Ostrovska for talking to us. Based on her expertise, she presents the initiative she considers the most useful for the contemporary Ukraine: 'Dignity in Action and the Right to Live Fully:a Scope of Inclusion for Persons with Disability'Bohdana speaks:This initiative represents a comprehensive strategy aimed at ensuring that persons with disabilities, especially children, can live with dignity and respect for their human rights while promoting their inclusion and integration into modern society across all aspects of public life:1.    Access to Public Life: Ensures full participation in mobility; housing design and accommodations; services accessibility (education, medical, administrative etc.); employment and entertainment.2. Independence and Equality: Advocates for equal opportunities, supporting their ability to work remotely, while fostering greater independence from external assistance.3. Support for Families: Enables family members to secure fair compensation while caring for a relative with a disability.4. Social Integration: Ability to build their social lives without…

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Ruslana Kuzina – on rebuilding Ukraine

Today Ruslana Kuzina speaks.About:As an academic and consultant, I have dedicated my career to advancing sustainability, financial reporting and governance through research, education and policy advisory work, with a strong focus on integrating international standards (IFRS, SDG reporting) into academic curricula and professional development.Before the war and now:For years I lived in Odessa with my family and worked as a professor at the Odessa National Economic University, where I led international conferences, academic workshops and interdisciplinary research on sustainability reporting, financial governance and international accounting standards. As head of the Department of Accounting and Taxation, I played a key role in academia.After the start of the war, I moved to Belgium with my family and now work in the Department of Accounting and Finance at KU Leuven. My research focuses on the barriers to sustainable development caused by geopolitical risks in the EU, which is explored in my forthcoming Palgrave…

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Anna Sarybaieva (Pisarenko) – on rebuilding Ukraine

We've talked to Dr. Anna Sarybaieva (Pisarenko), who has 20 years of research experience in the fields of administrative law, administrative justice and administrative services.Anna's story:Before the war, I was a Ph. D. (Doctorate ), Associate Professor at the Department of Administrative and Financial Law at the National University “Odesa Law Academy.”In 2022, I left Ukraine, first moving to Germany, and I am currently residing in Austria. In 2024, I was a researcher at the Institute for Human Sciences in Vienna and am now a member of the European Law Institute, actively participating in the institute’s events.What I would “bring back” from Austria and Germany?•          The culture of trade unions,•          Strong protection for employees,•          Social insurance systems.The integration of these values into Ukraine’s legal and social framework would facilitate the faster restoration of a fair civil society.Many thanks for participation!

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Olha Tylchyk – rebuilding Ukraine

Today we introduce Dr Olha Tylchyk. At the beginning of the war she was a professor of administrative law at the University of State Tax Servants of Ukraine, Irpin, Ukraine. She left Ukraine with her daughter and parents in March 2022 and has been living in Spain since then. De. Tylchyk is now working at the University of Barcelona. She continues her research work in collaboration with colleagues from different countries and creates a safe environment for her daughter.Bridging Two Worlds:If I could bring one thing from Spain to help rebuild Ukraine, it would be the area of urban mobility for the transport of goods and people, especially with regard to the mobility of people with disabilities. This area is one of the most sensitive for Ukraine due to the destruction caused and its importance in restoring normal life.To advance this mission, I seek to collaborate with organisations, researchers and funders…

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Lilian Wished – on rebuilding Ukraine

The first non-scientist in our project - Lilian Wished. She is a coach, mentor, psychologist and energy therapist.Lilian speaks:Before the war and now: When the war began, I was running my own business in Odessa, Ukraine, where I had a private practice.I left Ukraine in 2022 and have since lived in several countries, including Lithuania and Germany. Despite these changes, I continue my private practice, as people need help and support now more than ever.Bridging two worlds: encouraging language learning.If I could bring one idea to help rebuild Ukraine, it would be a stronger system of promoting foreign language learning at all ages.Language skills open up new opportunities for individuals and society as a whole. In many countries, local and state authorities actively support multilingual education, recognising that speaking several languages improves employment prospects, access to international knowledge and cultural exchange. In Ukraine's future, I see a system where foreign language…

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