Assessment of war effects on the publishing activity and scientific interests of Ukrainian scholars
-
DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.21511/kpm.06(1).2022.03
-
Article InfoVolume 6 2022, Issue #1, pp. 27-37
- Cited by
- 549 Views
-
125 Downloads
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This paper highlights war effects on publication activities and scientific interests of Ukrainian researchers. Moreover, it presents the moods and motives of Ukrainian scientists regarding their scientific activity and the publication of their results in academic journals. The research method was a survey (Google Forms) distributed through Facebook professional groups “Ukrainian Scientists Worldwide,” “Ukrainian cuisine of scientific publications,” “Scientific Conferences and Publications,” and “Higher School and Science of Ukraine: Disintegration or Blossoming?” 690 Ukrainian scientists took part in the survey. Only 35.7% of the respondents stated that the war did not affect their research process. Results from respondents demonstrated that 27.7% of the respondents changed their scientific interests because of full-scale Russian aggression. Furthermore, scientists have psychological problems due to the loss of home, relatives, and relocation. The survey showed that motivation for publishing scientific articles varies from informing colleagues of their scientific results, scientific interest to motives distant from scientific values – “fulfillment of the requirements of the institution where I work,” “I do not want to be fired,” etc. 20.0% of the respondents noted that they had not got any motivation for scientific activity and publishing. At the same time, most scientists consider state security, debunking the propaganda of the Russian Federation, economic development, military medicine, ecology, education, social sphere, and agriculture to be the leading research areas. They also see the need to raise public awareness of the role of science and synchronize current multidisciplinary scientific research.
- Keywords
-
References26
-
Tables0
-
Figures4
-
- Figure 1. Answers to the question “How exactly did the war prevent you from conducting scientific research?”
- Figure 2. Motivation for publishing scientific articles in war conditions
- Figure 3. Answers to the question “What forms of academic and social support do you need?”
- Figure 4. Answers to the question “What are the financial conditions for publishing articles during wartime?”
-
- Abbasi, K. (2022). Russia’s war: Why The BMJ opposes an academic boycott. BMJ, 376.
- Aydin, B., Dorofeyeva, U., Strelko, G., Ulanova, V., Hudkova, D., Maliuta, O., Pischana, T., Korobko, M., Lyzohub, O., Kotliarova, E., Simiian, P., Kozyra, O., & Mazur, P. (2022). A war in Europe?: Ukrainian scientists’ struggle for life and future, relocation and securing of frozen biomaterials. Human Reproduction, 37(1), 188.
- Blind, K., Filipović, E., & Lazina, L. K. (2022). Motives to publish, to patent and to standardize: an explorative study based on individual engineers’ assessments. Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 175, 121420.
- Blind, K., Pohlisch, J., & Zi, A. (2018). Publishing, patenting, and standardization: Motives and barriers of scientists. Research Policy, 47(7), 1185-1197.
- Borgato, M. T., & Phili, C. (2022). In Foreign Lands: The Migration of Scientists for Political or Economic Reasons. Birkhäuser.
- Chumachenko, D. (2022). Open letter from scientists of Ukraine regarding Russian military intervention. ResearchGate.
- European Commission (EC). (2022, March 4). Commission suspends cooperation with Russia on research and innovation.
- Gaind, N., & Else, H. (2022). Global research community condemns Russian invasion of Ukraine. Nature, 603, 209-210.
- Gibney, E. (2020). The pandemic mixed up what scientists study – and some won’t go back. Nature, 582, 173-174.
- Karamushka, L., Kredentser, O., Tereshchenko, K., Lagodzinska, V., Ivkin, V., & Kovalchuk, O. (2022). Osoblyvosti psykhichnoho zdorovia personalu osvitnikh ta naukovykh orhanizatsii v umovakh viiny [Peculiarities of the mental health of the personnel of educational and scientific organizations in the conditions of war]. Orhanizatsiina Psykholohiia. Ekonomichna Psykholohiia – Organizational Psychology. Economic Psychology, 1(25), 62-74. (In Ukrainian).
- Kurapov, A., Pavlenko, V., Drozdov, A., Bezliudna, V., Reznik, A., & Isralowitz, R. (2022). Toward an Understanding of the Russian-Ukrainian War Impact on University Students and Personnel. Journal of Loss and Trauma.
- Lam, A. (2011). What motivates academic scientists to engage in research commercialization: ‘Gold’, ‘ribbon’ or ‘puzzle’? Research Policy, 40(10), 1354-1368.
- Maryl, M., Ivashchenko, O., Reinfelds, M., Reinsone, S., & Rose, M. E. (2022). Addressing the needs of Ukrainian scholars at risk. Nature Human Behaviour, 6, 746-747.
- Mryglod, О., Nazarovets, S., & Kozmenko, S. (2021). Universal and specific features of Ukrainian economic research: publication analysis based on Crossref data. Scientometrics, 126, 8187-8203.
- Nazarovets, M., & Teixeira da Silva, J. A. (2022). Scientific publishing sanctions in response to the Russo-Ukrainian war. Learned Publishing.
- Nicholas, D. (2022). European Association of Science Editors’ statement in support of Ukraine. European Science Editing, 48, e84992.
- Petersen, O., & Verkhratsky, A. (2022). The Responsibility of Scientists in a Time of War. Function, 3(3), zqac023.
- Plackett, B. (2022). The future of research collaborations involving Russia. Nature.
- Pulverer, B. (2022). Rubble to Rouble: how can science respond to war? EMBO Reports, 23(4), e55002.
- Qureshi, A., Rizwan, M. S., Ahmad, G., & Ashraf, D. (2022). Russia-Ukraine War and systemic risk: Who is taking the heat? Finance Research Letters, 48, 103036.
- Stoika, R., Gudimchuk, N., Shcherbata, H., Zaraisky, A., Shcheglovitov, O., Kozorovitskiy, Y., & Korolchuk, V. (2022). The voices of Ukrainian and Russian scientists. Cell, 185(8), 1283-1286.
- Sukhorolskyi, P. (2022). Russian Aggression against Ukraine: Past, Present, and Futures. Journal of Futures Studies, 26(4), 1-13.
- UAScience.Reload. (2022). Proiekt pidtrymky ukrainskykh naukovtsiv [Support project for Ukrainian scientists] [Presentation Slides]. (In Ukrainian).
- Wise, J. (2022). Ukraine conflict: Global research community reviews links with Russia. BMJ, 376, o637.
- Zayachkivska, O., Smiechowska, T., & Souchelnytskyi, S. (2022). The war and science in Ukraine: we can contribute to victory. Proceedings of the Shevchenko Scientific Society. Medical Sciences, 66(1), 14-21.
- Zhao, Z., Bu, Y., Kang, L., Min, C., Bian, Y., Tang, L., & Li, J. (2020). An investigation of the relationship between scientists’ mobility to/from China and their research performance. Journal of Informetrics, 14(2), 101037.