Кафедра міжнародного та європейського права
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing Кафедра міжнародного та європейського права by Author "Holovko-Havrysheva, Oksana"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Third mission of universities: regulatory frameworks in a comparative perspective(2023) Holovko-Havrysheva, Oksana; Krayevska, Oksana; Sas SvitlanaThis contribution focuses on the EU, national and institutional practices of HEIs’ third mission regulation with a particular attention to the experiences of Ukrainian HEIs, which they developed in response to the challenges caused by the ongoing Russian aggression against Ukraine. It is argued that currently the regulatory frameworks for the third mission are more established at the intra-institutional level about ensuring the entrepreneurial aspects of the HEIs engagement, whereas the third mission social engagement models still remain on margins of the university life.Item Ukraine: Geopolitical realities and regional development perspectives(2023) Pascariu, Gabriela Carmen; Holovko-Havrysheva, Oksana; Krayevska, OksanaAfter the Russian Federation started the military attack and aggressive war against Ukraine on February 24 2022, the rules-based world order has experienced unprecedented threats on its values, where the prohibition of use of force, human rights, democracy, and rule of law are key principles and are deemed to be adhered to worldwide. For Europe, this is the biggest war the continent faces after the Second World War, leading to the principal unity of all democratic European states concerning the assistance for Ukraine during the war time. At the same time, it is showing the weaknesses of global and regional cooperation fora and highlighting the need for a new concept for the post-war international order, where the regional dimensions will play the crucial role. This task requires the reconsideration of Ukraine's role on regional and global maps as the key factor for ensuring peace, security, and economic stability. Ukraine changed recently its position from a ‘decision-taker’ on international processes to a decisionmaker, since the Ukrainian peace formula is on the negotiation table as a model for the post-war regulation in many countries worldwide. Recent security initiatives with reviving the idea of Lublin Triangle focusing on deepening cooperation between Poland, Lithuania, and Ukraine, are facing aggressive threats while the political influence and potential of Ukraine as a regional political actor are growing.