Social structure of Ukrainian society under the influence of full-scale war: conceptual and empirical research
stmm. 2024 (1): 26-62
DOI https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2024.01.026
Full text: https://stmm.in.ua/archive/ukr/2024-1/5.pdf
OLENA SIMONCHUK, Doctor of Sciences in Sociology, Leading Research Fellow at the Social Structures Department, Institute of Sociology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (12, Shovkovychna St., Kyiv, 01021)
e.simon4uk@gmail.com
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7685-2387
This research is devoted to analyzing the changes that took place in the social-group structure of Ukrainian society during a year and a half of full-scale war. In order to realize this goal, firstly, the author considers the experience and conceptual foundations of the study of the relationship between war and social structure in Western and Ukrainian science and proposes a concept of the impact of total war on the social structure of a society that resists external aggression. Secondly, several preconditions of social-group dynamics were clarified — both destructive (due to which Ukraine quickly acquired characteristic features of the social structure during the martial law), and constructive (which contributed to the reproduction of pre-war social positions of citizens and a high degree of stability of the social system in general). Thirdly, the dynamics of the distribution of social groups and classes was analyzed every six months of the war based on various open official sources and the data of sociological surveys (in particular, the project “Social Inequality: Wartime Monitoring”, which was initiated by the researchers of the Department of Social Structures of the Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine). The author proves that during the year and a half of the full-scale war, significant (both objective and subjective) socio-structural changes took place among the economically active population, though not linear ones, but with certain fluctuations (a rapid and significant transformation in the first six months and a movement towards gradual recovery over the next year). In particular, a significant (three-fold) increase in two groups (members of the armed forces and the unemployed), which were outside economic activity and accounted for almost a third of the working-age population in September 2022, and a quarter — a year later. The most noticeable changes among the employed population were the reduction in the number and restructuring of the working class and the class of owners, including the oligarchs. Fourthly, the author makes a forecast of further social-group dynamics under favorable and unfavorable developments: how will the quantitative distribution and internal structure of the main classes and groups change, as well as the social structure of the country in general.
Keywords: social structure, social groups, social classes, class identities, war, Ukraine
References
Baryshpolets, M. (2021). The social structure of Ukrainian society during the Second World War on the pages of the "Encyclopedia of Ukrainian Studies". [In Ukrainian]. Pages of the military history of Ukraine: Collection of scientific articles, vol. 23 (pp. 8-29). Kyiv: Institute of History of Ukraine, NAS of Ukraine.
Chepurko, G. (2022). Labor market of Ukraine: modern challenges and risks. [In Ukrainian]. Sociology: theory, methods, marketing, 3, 121-148. https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2022.03.121
Davis, K., Moore, W. E. (1945). Some principles of stratification. American Sociological Review, 10, 242-249. https://doi.org/10.2307/2085643
Dembitskyi, S. (2023). Public opinion in Ukraine and how it is studied during the war. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2023 (pp. 15-44). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Evans, G., Tilley, J. (2017). The New Politics of Class: The Political Exclusion of the British Working Class. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198755753.001.0001
Hladun, O. M., Kulyk, N. V., Rudnytskyi, O. P. (2018). Ukraine, the state: the number, composition and movement of the population. [In Ukrainian]. In V. A. Smoliy et al. (Ed.), Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine. Book 1: Ukraine-Ukrainians. Kyiv: Institute of History of Ukraine, NAS of Ukraine, Naukova Dumka. Retrieved from: http://www.history.org.ua/?termin=1. 3. 2.
Golovakha, Ye., Dembitskyi, S., Makeiev, S. (2022). Introduction. The sociology of emergencies. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2022 (pp. 15-24). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Hinton, J. (2002). Women, Social Leadership, and the Second World War: Continuities of Class. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199243297.001.0001
Ivanenko, O. (2022). The labor market and employment during the war: state and prospects. [In Ukrainian]. Sociology: theory, methods, marketing, 4, 56-75. https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2022.04.056
Ivashchenko, O. (2022). Business in wartime: structuring and survival practices. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2022 (pp. 151-160). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Kryzhny, S. (2016). Civil collaborationism. An attempt at sociological analysis (Kharkiv during the occupation of 1941-1943). [In Ukrainian]. Kharkiv: Akta.
Kutsenko, O. (2022). I am waiting for the emergence of a new class of the information and digital era. Round table "Ukrainian society after victory. Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine. [In Ukrainian]. Retrieved from: https://www.ukrinform.ua/rubric-society/3527305-ak-vijna-zminue-ukrainske-suspilstvo.html.
Laas, N. (2008). Social stratification of Soviet society: conceptual searches in English-language historiography of the second half of the 20th - beginning of the 21st century. [In Ukrainian]. In Ukraine of the 20th century: Culture, ideology, politics (pp. 104-117). Kyiv: Institute of History, NAS of Ukraine.
Levinson, M. (2016). An Extraordinary Time: The End of the Postwar Boom and the Return of the Ordinary Economy. London: Random House Business Books.
Lysenko, O. E., Vetrov, I. G., Dubyk, M. G., Perehrest, O. G. (2011). Economy of Ukraine during the Second World War (1939-1945). [In Ukrainian]. In V. M. Lytvyn et al. (Ed.), Economic history of Ukraine: Historical and economic research: in 2 vol. (vol. 2, pp. 321-401). Kyiv: Nika Center.
Lysenko, O. Ye., Perehrest, O. G. (2011). Revival of the agrarian sector of the economy in 1943-1945. [In Ukrainian]. In V. M. Lytvyn et al. (Ed.), Economic history of Ukraine: Historical and economic research: in 2 vol. (vol. 2, pp. 348-353). Kyiv: Nika Center.
Mackey, R. (1999). Test of war: Inside Britain 1939-1945. Routledge.
Makeiev, S. (2011). Institutional incubus and the evolution of societies. [In Ukrainian]. Bulletin of Ivan Franko Lviv National University. Sociological series, 5, 3-10.
Makeiev, S. (2022a). Institutional states: norm, pathology, emergency. [In Ukrainian]. Sociology: theory, methods, marketing, 2, 22-39. https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2022.02.022
Makeiev, S. (2022b). Institutional landscape of martial law. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2022 (pp. 35-45). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Makeiev, S. (2023). Social structures of martial law in Ukraine. [In Ukrainian]. Retrieved from: https://i-soc.com.ua/ua/news/socialni-strukturi-voennogo-stanu-v-ukraini.
Mann, M. (1984). The Autonomous Power of the State: Its Origins, Mechanisms and Results. European Journal of Sociology, 25(2), 185-213. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003975600004239
Mann, M. (1993). The sources of social power: Vol. 2. The rise of classes and nation-states, 1760-1914. Cambridge University Press.
Marwick, A. (1977). World War II and Social Class in Great Britain. In A.C. Duke, C.A. Tamse (Eds.), Britain and the Netherlands (pр. 203-227). Springer Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-7518-8_10
Meron, M. and all ESSnet members. (2014). ESSnet ESeG Final Report. Paris: INSEE, Direction des Statistiques Démographiques et Sociales ESSnet project. Retrieved from: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/cros/system/files/ESEG_finalReport_Vcor30juillet.pdf.
Ocheretko, A. (2023). "Shahids" as locomotives of deurbanization. Earth. [In Ukrainian]. Retrieved from: https://zemlia.org.ua/zhurnali/zhurnali-za-2023-rik/2-2023/shahidi-yak-lokomotivi-deurbanizatsiyi/.
Opryshchenko, A. (2022). Unemployment in Ukraine: ways to overcome it and the post-war experience of other countries. [In Ukrainian]. Retrieved from: https://zaborona.com/bezrobittya-v-ukrayini-shlyahy-podolannya-ta-pislyavoyennyj-dosvid-inshyh-krayin/.
O'Reilly, C., Powell, B. (2015). War and the Growth of Government. European Journal of Political Economy, 40, 31-41. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2015.10.001
Perehrest, O. G. (2010). Agriculture of Ukraine during the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). [In Ukrainian]. Kyiv: Institute of History of Ukraine, NAS of Ukraine.
Rakhmanov, O. (2022). The phenomenon of oligarchization of political power in Ukraine: from rise to decline. [In Ukrainian]. Sociology: theory, methods, marketing, 4, 30-45. https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2022.04.030
Reient, O. P. (2011). Ukraine in the First World War (1914-1917). [In Ukrainian]. In V. M. Lytvyn et al. (Ed.), Economic history of Ukraine: Historical and economic research: in 2 vol. (vol. 2, pp. 64-97). Kyiv: Nika Center.
Rose, D., Harrison, E. (Eds.). (2010). Social Class in Europe: An introduction to the European Socio-economic Classification. London: Routledge.
Scheidel, W. (2017). The Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality from the Stone Age to the Twenty-First Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press. https://doi.org/10.1515/9781400884605
Simonchuk, O. (2018). Social classes in modern societies: the heuristic potential of class analysis. [In Ukrainian]. Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Simonchuk, O. (2020). The dynamics of Ukrainians' ideas about the social structure and their place in it. [In Ukrainian]. In S. Oksamytna, O. Simonchuk (Eds.), Dynamics of perception of social inequality in Ukraine (pp. 83-125). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine; National University "Kyiv-Mohyla Academy".
Simonchuk, O. (2022). Changes in class and status self-identification. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2022 (pp. 250-260). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Simonchuk, O. (2023). Social inequality in assessments of Ukrainians before and during the war. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2023 (pp. 120-150). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Smakota, V., Sokolovskyi, I., Tolstykh, N. (2023). Transformation of the labour market in conditions of war. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2023 (pp. 271-288). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Smoliy, V. A. (Ed.). (2011). [In Ukrainian]. Ukraine in the Second World War: a view from the 21st century, in 2 books. Kyiv: Scientific opinion.
Sorokin, P. (1922). Hunger and ideology [of society]. [In Russian]. Economist, 4-5, 3-32.
Sorokin, P. (1922). War and the militarization of society. [In Russian]. Artelnoie dielo, 1-4, 21-29.
Sorokin, P. (1925). The sociology of revolution (ch. XIII-XV). Philadelphia.
Sorokin, P. (1926). Social mobility. New York; London.
Sorokin, P. (1968 [1942]). Man and Society in Calamity. New York.
Sorokin, P. (2000 [1957]). Fluctuation of wars in the system of intergroup relations. [In Russian]. In P. Sorokin, Social and cultural dynamics (pp. 619-660). St. Petersburg: RHGI.
Sorokin, P. (2004). Sociological interpretation of the "struggle for existence" and the sociology of war. [In Russian]. In P. Tsygankov, I. Riazantsev (Eds.), Sociology of modern wars: Materials of a scientific seminar (pp. 134-184). M.: Alpha-M.
Spencer, H. (1876). Social types and constitutions. In H. Spencer, The Principles of Sociology (vol. 1, pp. 569-597). London: Williams and Norgate. https://doi.org/10.1037/14123-037
Ukraine: from war to peace and recovery. (2023). Analytical evaluations. Razumkov Center. [In Ukrainian]. Retrieved from: https://razumkov.org.ua/images/2023/11/07/2023-PAKT-3-October-1.pdf.
Received 29.10.2023
Social structure of Ukrainian society under the influence of full-scale war: conceptual and empirical research
stmm. 2024 (1): 26-62
DOI https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2024.01.026
Full text: https://stmm.in.ua/archive/ukr/2024-1/5.pdf
OLENA SIMONCHUK, Doctor of Sciences in Sociology, Leading Research Fellow at the Social Structures Department, Institute of Sociology, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (12, Shovkovychna St., Kyiv, 01021)
e.simon4uk@gmail.com
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7685-2387
This research is devoted to analyzing the changes that took place in the social-group structure of Ukrainian society during a year and a half of full-scale war. In order to realize this goal, firstly, the author considers the experience and conceptual foundations of the study of the relationship between war and social structure in Western and Ukrainian science and proposes a concept of the impact of total war on the social structure of a society that resists external aggression. Secondly, several preconditions of social-group dynamics were clarified — both destructive (due to which Ukraine quickly acquired characteristic features of the social structure during the martial law), and constructive (which contributed to the reproduction of pre-war social positions of citizens and a high degree of stability of the social system in general). Thirdly, the dynamics of the distribution of social groups and classes was analyzed every six months of the war based on various open official sources and the data of sociological surveys (in particular, the project “Social Inequality: Wartime Monitoring”, which was initiated by the researchers of the Department of Social Structures of the Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine). The author proves that during the year and a half of the full-scale war, significant (both objective and subjective) socio-structural changes took place among the economically active population, though not linear ones, but with certain fluctuations (a rapid and significant transformation in the first six months and a movement towards gradual recovery over the next year). In particular, a significant (three-fold) increase in two groups (members of the armed forces and the unemployed), which were outside economic activity and accounted for almost a third of the working-age population in September 2022, and a quarter — a year later. The most noticeable changes among the employed population were the reduction in the number and restructuring of the working class and the class of owners, including the oligarchs. Fourthly, the author makes a forecast of further social-group dynamics under favorable and unfavorable developments: how will the quantitative distribution and internal structure of the main classes and groups change, as well as the social structure of the country in general.
Keywords: social structure, social groups, social classes, class identities, war, Ukraine
References
Baryshpolets, M. (2021). The social structure of Ukrainian society during the Second World War on the pages of the "Encyclopedia of Ukrainian Studies". [In Ukrainian]. Pages of the military history of Ukraine: Collection of scientific articles, vol. 23 (pp. 8-29). Kyiv: Institute of History of Ukraine, NAS of Ukraine.
Chepurko, G. (2022). Labor market of Ukraine: modern challenges and risks. [In Ukrainian]. Sociology: theory, methods, marketing, 3, 121-148. https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2022.03.121
Davis, K., Moore, W. E. (1945). Some principles of stratification. American Sociological Review, 10, 242-249. https://doi.org/10.2307/2085643
Dembitskyi, S. (2023). Public opinion in Ukraine and how it is studied during the war. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2023 (pp. 15-44). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Evans, G., Tilley, J. (2017). The New Politics of Class: The Political Exclusion of the British Working Class. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198755753.001.0001
Hladun, O. M., Kulyk, N. V., Rudnytskyi, O. P. (2018). Ukraine, the state: the number, composition and movement of the population. [In Ukrainian]. In V. A. Smoliy et al. (Ed.), Encyclopedia of the History of Ukraine. Book 1: Ukraine-Ukrainians. Kyiv: Institute of History of Ukraine, NAS of Ukraine, Naukova Dumka. Retrieved from: http://www.history.org.ua/?termin=1. 3. 2.
Golovakha, Ye., Dembitskyi, S., Makeiev, S. (2022). Introduction. The sociology of emergencies. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2022 (pp. 15-24). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Hinton, J. (2002). Women, Social Leadership, and the Second World War: Continuities of Class. Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199243297.001.0001
Ivanenko, O. (2022). The labor market and employment during the war: state and prospects. [In Ukrainian]. Sociology: theory, methods, marketing, 4, 56-75. https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2022.04.056
Ivashchenko, O. (2022). Business in wartime: structuring and survival practices. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2022 (pp. 151-160). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Kryzhny, S. (2016). Civil collaborationism. An attempt at sociological analysis (Kharkiv during the occupation of 1941-1943). [In Ukrainian]. Kharkiv: Akta.
Kutsenko, O. (2022). I am waiting for the emergence of a new class of the information and digital era. Round table "Ukrainian society after victory. Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine. [In Ukrainian]. Retrieved from: https://www.ukrinform.ua/rubric-society/3527305-ak-vijna-zminue-ukrainske-suspilstvo.html.
Laas, N. (2008). Social stratification of Soviet society: conceptual searches in English-language historiography of the second half of the 20th - beginning of the 21st century. [In Ukrainian]. In Ukraine of the 20th century: Culture, ideology, politics (pp. 104-117). Kyiv: Institute of History, NAS of Ukraine.
Levinson, M. (2016). An Extraordinary Time: The End of the Postwar Boom and the Return of the Ordinary Economy. London: Random House Business Books.
Lysenko, O. E., Vetrov, I. G., Dubyk, M. G., Perehrest, O. G. (2011). Economy of Ukraine during the Second World War (1939-1945). [In Ukrainian]. In V. M. Lytvyn et al. (Ed.), Economic history of Ukraine: Historical and economic research: in 2 vol. (vol. 2, pp. 321-401). Kyiv: Nika Center.
Lysenko, O. Ye., Perehrest, O. G. (2011). Revival of the agrarian sector of the economy in 1943-1945. [In Ukrainian]. In V. M. Lytvyn et al. (Ed.), Economic history of Ukraine: Historical and economic research: in 2 vol. (vol. 2, pp. 348-353). Kyiv: Nika Center.
Mackey, R. (1999). Test of war: Inside Britain 1939-1945. Routledge.
Makeiev, S. (2011). Institutional incubus and the evolution of societies. [In Ukrainian]. Bulletin of Ivan Franko Lviv National University. Sociological series, 5, 3-10.
Makeiev, S. (2022a). Institutional states: norm, pathology, emergency. [In Ukrainian]. Sociology: theory, methods, marketing, 2, 22-39. https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2022.02.022
Makeiev, S. (2022b). Institutional landscape of martial law. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2022 (pp. 35-45). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Makeiev, S. (2023). Social structures of martial law in Ukraine. [In Ukrainian]. Retrieved from: https://i-soc.com.ua/ua/news/socialni-strukturi-voennogo-stanu-v-ukraini.
Mann, M. (1984). The Autonomous Power of the State: Its Origins, Mechanisms and Results. European Journal of Sociology, 25(2), 185-213. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003975600004239
Mann, M. (1993). The sources of social power: Vol. 2. The rise of classes and nation-states, 1760-1914. Cambridge University Press.
Marwick, A. (1977). World War II and Social Class in Great Britain. In A.C. Duke, C.A. Tamse (Eds.), Britain and the Netherlands (pр. 203-227). Springer Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-7518-8_10
Meron, M. and all ESSnet members. (2014). ESSnet ESeG Final Report. Paris: INSEE, Direction des Statistiques Démographiques et Sociales ESSnet project. Retrieved from: https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/cros/system/files/ESEG_finalReport_Vcor30juillet.pdf.
Ocheretko, A. (2023). "Shahids" as locomotives of deurbanization. Earth. [In Ukrainian]. Retrieved from: https://zemlia.org.ua/zhurnali/zhurnali-za-2023-rik/2-2023/shahidi-yak-lokomotivi-deurbanizatsiyi/.
Opryshchenko, A. (2022). Unemployment in Ukraine: ways to overcome it and the post-war experience of other countries. [In Ukrainian]. Retrieved from: https://zaborona.com/bezrobittya-v-ukrayini-shlyahy-podolannya-ta-pislyavoyennyj-dosvid-inshyh-krayin/.
O'Reilly, C., Powell, B. (2015). War and the Growth of Government. European Journal of Political Economy, 40, 31-41. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2015.10.001
Perehrest, O. G. (2010). Agriculture of Ukraine during the Great Patriotic War (1941-1945). [In Ukrainian]. Kyiv: Institute of History of Ukraine, NAS of Ukraine.
Rakhmanov, O. (2022). The phenomenon of oligarchization of political power in Ukraine: from rise to decline. [In Ukrainian]. Sociology: theory, methods, marketing, 4, 30-45. https://doi.org/10.15407/sociology2022.04.030
Reient, O. P. (2011). Ukraine in the First World War (1914-1917). [In Ukrainian]. In V. M. Lytvyn et al. (Ed.), Economic history of Ukraine: Historical and economic research: in 2 vol. (vol. 2, pp. 64-97). Kyiv: Nika Center.
Rose, D., Harrison, E. (Eds.). (2010). Social Class in Europe: An introduction to the European Socio-economic Classification. London: Routledge.
Scheidel, W. (2017). The Great Leveler: Violence and the History of Inequality from the Stone Age to the Twenty-First Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press. https://doi.org/10.1515/9781400884605
Simonchuk, O. (2018). Social classes in modern societies: the heuristic potential of class analysis. [In Ukrainian]. Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Simonchuk, O. (2020). The dynamics of Ukrainians' ideas about the social structure and their place in it. [In Ukrainian]. In S. Oksamytna, O. Simonchuk (Eds.), Dynamics of perception of social inequality in Ukraine (pp. 83-125). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine; National University "Kyiv-Mohyla Academy".
Simonchuk, O. (2022). Changes in class and status self-identification. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2022 (pp. 250-260). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Simonchuk, O. (2023). Social inequality in assessments of Ukrainians before and during the war. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2023 (pp. 120-150). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Smakota, V., Sokolovskyi, I., Tolstykh, N. (2023). Transformation of the labour market in conditions of war. [In Ukrainian]. In Ye. Golovakha, S. Makeiev (Eds.), Ukrainian society in wartime. Year 2023 (pp. 271-288). Kyiv: Institute of Sociology, NAS of Ukraine.
Smoliy, V. A. (Ed.). (2011). [In Ukrainian]. Ukraine in the Second World War: a view from the 21st century, in 2 books. Kyiv: Scientific opinion.
Sorokin, P. (1922). Hunger and ideology [of society]. [In Russian]. Economist, 4-5, 3-32.
Sorokin, P. (1922). War and the militarization of society. [In Russian]. Artelnoie dielo, 1-4, 21-29.
Sorokin, P. (1925). The sociology of revolution (ch. XIII-XV). Philadelphia.
Sorokin, P. (1926). Social mobility. New York; London.
Sorokin, P. (1968 [1942]). Man and Society in Calamity. New York.
Sorokin, P. (2000 [1957]). Fluctuation of wars in the system of intergroup relations. [In Russian]. In P. Sorokin, Social and cultural dynamics (pp. 619-660). St. Petersburg: RHGI.
Sorokin, P. (2004). Sociological interpretation of the "struggle for existence" and the sociology of war. [In Russian]. In P. Tsygankov, I. Riazantsev (Eds.), Sociology of modern wars: Materials of a scientific seminar (pp. 134-184). M.: Alpha-M.
Spencer, H. (1876). Social types and constitutions. In H. Spencer, The Principles of Sociology (vol. 1, pp. 569-597). London: Williams and Norgate. https://doi.org/10.1037/14123-037
Ukraine: from war to peace and recovery. (2023). Analytical evaluations. Razumkov Center. [In Ukrainian]. Retrieved from: https://razumkov.org.ua/images/2023/11/07/2023-PAKT-3-October-1.pdf.
Received 29.10.2023