The Ukrainian Weekly 1996
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Ukraine and the Yugoslav Conflict
Nationalities Papers, Vol. 25, No. 3, 1997 UKRAINE AND THE YUGOSLAV CONFLICT Taras Kuzio Even before gaining independence in December 1991 from the former USSR, Ukraine had supported Slovenia and Croatia's drive to independence from the former Yugoslavia. In May 1991, Croatian President Franjo Tudjman paid an official visit to Ukraine where then parliamentary speaker Leonid Kravchuk expressed sympathy with Croatia's desire for independence. Tudjman pointed out how Ukraine's seat at the United Nations had given it a head start in obtaining international recognition of its independent status. On 12 December 1991, twelve days after the Ukrainian referendum on independence, Kyiv became one of the first states to diplomatically recognise Croatia and Slovenia; and further, it announced its readiness to open embassies in both countries.1 Ukraine was the first member of the U.N. to recognise Croatia; the second and third countries, Slovenia and Lithuania, were not members of the U.N. when they recognised Croatia. Ukraine's motives were quite clear early on vis-a-vis Yugoslavia. First, it wanted to reaffirm its independent status as a new international state. Secondly, Kyiv desired to distance itself from Russian sympathy with Serbia and Yugoslavia2 in order to show the outside world—particularly at that stage, the sceptical West—that Ukraine and Russia were indeed different peoples and nations.3 Fourthly, Ukraine desired to show the outside world that it was a respectable and co-operative member of the international community. Finally, a majority of the Ukrainian leadership sympathised with the Croats and Slovenes in their drive to independence, comparing it to Ukraine's quest to divorce itself from Russia. -
Report on the Project
Report on the Project: Dimensions, Opportunities and Benefits of Ukraine - NATO Relations. Impact of NATO Enlargement on Ukraine’s Foreign Policy Process NATO - EAPC Research Fellowship Programme, 1999 – 2001 By Dr. Sergiy Tolstov, Supervisory Research Fellow, Institute of World Economy and International Relations, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, and Director of the Institute for Political Analysis and International Studies 28 June 2001, Kyiv (Ukraine) 2 Conents: 1. Introduction 2. Dimensions of European and Euro-Atlantic Security Cooperation (concepts and scenarios) 2.1. The New World Order 2.2. Strategic Approaches and Perceptions 2.3. Towards the New European Security Architecture 3. The Internal Factors and Features of Ukraine’s Development in the Context of European Transformation Processes 3.1. General Trends 3.2. Constitutional Referendum 2000 and Political Opposition 3.3. The Tapegate Affair 3.4. Situation in the System of Power 4. Monitoring of Domestic Debates on Foreign Policy Matters. 4.1. The Foreign Policy Concept 4.2. Peculiarities of the National Foreign Policy Process 4.3. Parliamentary Debates and the 1999 Presidential Elections 4.4. Security Issues in the Domestic Political Discussion 5. Impact of Ukraine - NATO Cooperation on Ukraine’s Foreign Policy. 5.1. Developing Ukraine – NATO Partnership 5.2. Ukraine’s Security Prospects in the Context of NATO Enlargement 5.3. State Programme for Cooperation of Ukraine with NATO, 1998 - 2001 5.4. State Programme for Cooperation of Ukraine with NATO, 2001-2004 6. Tendencies of International Relations in Central Eastern Europe 6.1. Results of Transformations in the Central Eastern Europe and the Post-Soviet Space 6.2. -
U.S. Department of Transportation Federal
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ORDER TRANSPORTATION JO 7340.2E FEDERAL AVIATION Effective Date: ADMINISTRATION July 24, 2014 Air Traffic Organization Policy Subject: Contractions Includes Change 1 dated 11/13/14 https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/publications/atpubs/CNT/3-3.HTM A 3- Company Country Telephony Ltr AAA AVICON AVIATION CONSULTANTS & AGENTS PAKISTAN AAB ABELAG AVIATION BELGIUM ABG AAC ARMY AIR CORPS UNITED KINGDOM ARMYAIR AAD MANN AIR LTD (T/A AMBASSADOR) UNITED KINGDOM AMBASSADOR AAE EXPRESS AIR, INC. (PHOENIX, AZ) UNITED STATES ARIZONA AAF AIGLE AZUR FRANCE AIGLE AZUR AAG ATLANTIC FLIGHT TRAINING LTD. UNITED KINGDOM ATLANTIC AAH AEKO KULA, INC D/B/A ALOHA AIR CARGO (HONOLULU, UNITED STATES ALOHA HI) AAI AIR AURORA, INC. (SUGAR GROVE, IL) UNITED STATES BOREALIS AAJ ALFA AIRLINES CO., LTD SUDAN ALFA SUDAN AAK ALASKA ISLAND AIR, INC. (ANCHORAGE, AK) UNITED STATES ALASKA ISLAND AAL AMERICAN AIRLINES INC. UNITED STATES AMERICAN AAM AIM AIR REPUBLIC OF MOLDOVA AIM AIR AAN AMSTERDAM AIRLINES B.V. NETHERLANDS AMSTEL AAO ADMINISTRACION AERONAUTICA INTERNACIONAL, S.A. MEXICO AEROINTER DE C.V. AAP ARABASCO AIR SERVICES SAUDI ARABIA ARABASCO AAQ ASIA ATLANTIC AIRLINES CO., LTD THAILAND ASIA ATLANTIC AAR ASIANA AIRLINES REPUBLIC OF KOREA ASIANA AAS ASKARI AVIATION (PVT) LTD PAKISTAN AL-AAS AAT AIR CENTRAL ASIA KYRGYZSTAN AAU AEROPA S.R.L. ITALY AAV ASTRO AIR INTERNATIONAL, INC. PHILIPPINES ASTRO-PHIL AAW AFRICAN AIRLINES CORPORATION LIBYA AFRIQIYAH AAX ADVANCE AVIATION CO., LTD THAILAND ADVANCE AVIATION AAY ALLEGIANT AIR, INC. (FRESNO, CA) UNITED STATES ALLEGIANT AAZ AEOLUS AIR LIMITED GAMBIA AEOLUS ABA AERO-BETA GMBH & CO., STUTTGART GERMANY AEROBETA ABB AFRICAN BUSINESS AND TRANSPORTATIONS DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF AFRICAN BUSINESS THE CONGO ABC ABC WORLD AIRWAYS GUIDE ABD AIR ATLANTA ICELANDIC ICELAND ATLANTA ABE ABAN AIR IRAN (ISLAMIC REPUBLIC ABAN OF) ABF SCANWINGS OY, FINLAND FINLAND SKYWINGS ABG ABAKAN-AVIA RUSSIAN FEDERATION ABAKAN-AVIA ABH HOKURIKU-KOUKUU CO., LTD JAPAN ABI ALBA-AIR AVIACION, S.L. -
Ponuda Za LIVE 11.10.2017
Sheet1 kickoff_time sport competition_name home_name away_name 2017-10-11 16:00:00 BASKETBALL Euroleague Women UMMC Ekaterinburg Women Wisla Can-Pack Women 2017-10-11 17:00:00 BASKETBALL FIBA Europe Cup Qual Khimik Yuzhny Istanbul BB 2017-10-11 17:00:00 BASKETBALL Russia Superleague Khimki Podmoskovie Spartak Primorie 2017-10-11 17:00:00 BASKETBALL WABA League Women Yakin Dogu Universitesi Women Crvena Zvezda Women 2017-10-11 17:30:00 BASKETBALL Balkan League BC Levski 2014 Kumanovo 2017-10-11 17:30:00 BASKETBALL FIBA Europe Cup Qual Beroe Mons-Hainaut 2017-10-11 17:30:00 BASKETBALL Latvia LBL Jekabpils Valka/Valga 2017-10-11 17:30:00 BASKETBALL Russia Superleague MBA Moscow Irkutsk 2017-10-11 18:00:00 BASKETBALL Alpe Adria Cup UBSC Graz Levicki Patrioti 2017-10-11 18:00:00 BASKETBALL Alpe Adria Cup Zlatorog Lasko BC Prievidza 2017-10-11 18:00:00 BASKETBALL Champions League Ventspils Iberostar Tenerife 2017-10-11 18:00:00 BASKETBALL Champions League Qual Tartu Ulikool Buyukcekmece 2017-10-11 18:00:00 BASKETBALL Eurocup Lietkabelis Hapoel Jerusalem 2017-10-11 18:00:00 BASKETBALL Eurocup Lietuvos Rytas Bilbao Basket 2017-10-11 18:00:00 BASKETBALL Euroleague Women Dynamo Kursk Women Royal Castors Braine Women 2017-10-11 18:00:00 BASKETBALL Euroleague Women Sopron Women Galatasaray Women 2017-10-11 18:00:00 BASKETBALL FIBA Europe Cup Qual AEK Larnaca Nevezis 2017-10-11 18:00:00 BASKETBALL FIBA Europe Cup Qual Falco Szombathely Balkan Botevgrad 2017-10-11 18:30:00 BASKETBALL Champions League Aris Zielona Gora 2017-10-11 18:30:00 BASKETBALL -
Abn Correspondence Bulletin of the Anti-Bolshevik Bloc of Nations
FREEDOM FOR NATIONS ! CORRESPONDENCE FREEDOM FOR INDIVIDUALS! JANUARY-FEBRUARY 1989 CONTENTS: Carolling Ukrainian-Style ....................... 2 The Autobiography of Levko Lukyanenko ..................... 3 European Freedom Council Meeting ..............................16 Statement of the European Freedom Council .............. 16 Hon. John Wilkinson, M.P. Eastern European Policy for Western Europe .............. 19 Genevieve Aubry, M.P. Is Switzerland Ready for a New Challenge with the European Nations .......................... 26 Sir Frederic Bennett Can the Soviet Russian Empire Survive? ....................... 31 Bertil Haggman Aiding the Forces of Freedom in the Soviet Empire ................................... 34 Ukrainian Christian Democratic Front Holds Inaugural Meeting ........... 40 David Remnick Ukraine Could be Soviets’ Next Trouble Spot ..............41 Bohdan Nahaylo Specter of the Empire Haunts the Soviet Union ..........45 Appeal to the Russian Intelligentsia ......... ......................47 Freedom for Nations! Freedom for Individuals! ABN CORRESPONDENCE BULLETIN OF THE ANTI-BOLSHEVIK BLOC OF NATIONS Publisher and Owner (Verleger und Inha It is not our practice to pay for contribut ber): American Friends of the Anti-Bolshevik ed materials. Reproduction permitted only Bloc of Nations (AF ABN), 136 Second Avenue, with indication of source (ABN Corr.). New York, N.Y. 10003, USA. Annual subscription: 27 Dollars in the Zweigstelle Deutschland: A. Dankiw, USA, and the equivalent of 27 US Dollars in Zeppelinstr. 67, 8000 München 80. all other countries. Remittances to Deutsche Editorial Staff: Board of Editors Bank, Munich, Neuhauser Str. 6, Account Editor-in-Chief: Mrs. Slava Stetsko, M.A. No. 3021003, Anna Dankiw. Zeppelinstr. 67 Schriftleitung: Redaktionskollegium. 8000 München 80 Verantw. Redakteur Frau Slava Stetzko. West Germany Zeppelinstraße 67 Articles signed with name or pseudonym 8000 München 80 do not necessarily reflect the Editor’s opinion, Telefon: 48 25 32 but that of the author. -
Mapping the Ukrainian Poetry of New York
Introduction: Mapping the Ukrainian Poetry of New York In the midst of ever-increasing quantity, anthologies enable individual voices to be heard above the collective noise. —Czeslaw Milosz1 In the very city of New York literally every day poets read their work in dozens of different places: at museums, churches, universities, various institutions, libraries, theatres, galleries, cafes and private places. […] Every place that has a roof is a place for poetry. —Bohdan Boychuk2 This poetry is no hymn to the homeland; rather the gaze of the allegorist, as it falls on the city, is the gaze of alienated man. It is the gaze of the flaneur, whose way of life still conceals behind a mitigating nimbus the coming desolation of the big-city dweller. —Walter Benjamin3 The Encounter Legend has it that on a mid-fall day in 1966, while on an official trip to New York City as part of the Soviet-Ukrainian delegation to the annual convention of the United Nations, Ivan Drach—then a thirty-year-old aspiring poet and screenwriter—managed to escape the KGB personnel tailing the poet and headed into a district of the city totally unknown to him. After wandering around this strange neighborhood, the poet stopped before a cafeteria, entered it, and spotted a bearded, bespectacled man sitting in the corner as if waiting for someone. Drach approached him; the two men shook hands. The bearded man, believed to be the American poet Allen Ginsberg, lived nearby in an area known as the East Village. The Ukrainian poet did not know conversational English well, and Ginsberg did not know any Ukrainian. -
The Ukrainian Weekly 1989, No.10
www.ukrweekly.com І : І І Published by the Ukrainian National Association Inc.. a fraternal non-profit association| іїаІИН Ї Vol. LVII No. 10 THE UKRAINIAN WEEKLY SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1989 50 cents Revelations about Chornobyl accident Initiative group seeks renewal raise questions on extent of cover-up of Ukrainian Orthodox Church by Dr. David Marples hitherto, noting that reports from the by Bohdan Nahaylo the USSR and the Ukrainian SSR and zone had highlighted only the bravery to the international Christian commu As the recent revelations about the of pilots, miners, builders and soldiers. A group of Ukrainian Christians led by nity, the five founding members con degree of contamination of Byelorus Mr. Kachura explains that both the a priest ordained in the Russian Ortho demn the suppression of the Ukrainian sian villages demonstrate, there is much Ukrainian party and government took dox Church have announced the forma- Autocephalous Orthodox Church still to be related about the results of an active role throughout. The Ukrai tation of the Initiative Committee for during the Stalin era and maintain that radioactive fallout from the April 1986 nian leaders, in his words, "had no time the Renewal of the Ukrainian Auto- the Russian Orthodox Church "is not disaster at the Chornobyl nuclear power to give interviews" because they were cephalous Orthodox Church. capable of satisfying the needs of plant. explaining problems as they arose. In their inaugural statement, dated Ukrainian Orthodox believers." Officially, the consequences of the However, there is evidence to show February 15 and addressed to the accident will be much less serious than (Continued on page 2) Presidiums of the Supreme Soviets of Background originally prognosticated. -
The Ukrainian Weekly 1986, No.52
www.ukrweekly.com ^f|f fpuMshed by the Ukrainian National Association Inc., a fraternal non-profit association^ Ukrainian Weekly Vol. LIV No. 52 THE UKRAINIAN WEEKLY SUNDAY, DECEMBER 28,1986 25 cents Ratushynska arrives in Britain Sakharov, Bonner return to Moscow JERSEY CITY, N.J. — Soviet such conditions that we would not want JERSEY CITY, N.J. —Dr. Andrei crimes. poetess Iryna Ratushynska arrived in to continue human-rights activities in Sakharov and his wife Elena Bonner News of Dr. Sakharo¥*s release came London on December 18 with her the future," she stated. "Frequently returned to Moscow Tuesday, Decem on Friday, Decerrtber 19, at a press husband, Ihor Herashchenko, and after measures applied to us were senseless ber 23, ending nearly seven years' conference. Vladimir F. Petrovsky, a a meeting with Prime Minister Mar- humiliations. As a rule, actual physical internal exile in the town of Gorky for deputy foreign mimster,announced that geret Thatcher on December 22 an blows were not used. They did not need the physicist and two for his wife, for the Soviet authorities had approved a nounced her plans to stay in the West. this. their advocacy of human rights. request by the physicist to return to Ms. Ratushynska, 32, arrived in the "They refined it down to extreme cold, Dr. Sakharov and Ms. Bonner were Moscow with his wife. Dr. Sakharov West with a three-month Soviet travel extreme filth, extreme hunger. Condi greeted by a swarm of Western re won the 1975 Peace Prize for his human visa to seek medical treatment. -
Team Ukraine R a I N I a N
Team Ukraine Media guide 2007 ÇÒÂÛ͇ËÌÒ͇fl ÒÔÓÚ˂̇fl „‡ÁÂÚ‡ ëÚ‡ÚËÒÚ˘Ìi ÂÒÛÒË Û͇ªÌÒ¸ÍÓ„Ó ıÓͲ www.komanda.com.ua www.hockey.org.ua Ukrainian Ice Hockey National Team first&last 17/04/2007 21:14 Page 1 first&last 17/04/2007 21:15 Page 2 b 3, 22, 4, 21 17/04/2007 20:50 Page 1 UKRAINE: YEAR BY YEAR SUMMARIES Season: GP W T L GF – GA 2007 IIHF World Championship 1992/93 9 6 1 2 113 – 20 1993/94 8 5 2 1 65 – 9 RUSSIA (Moscow, Mytischi). 27.04 – 13.05.2007 1994/95 4 2 1 1 27 – 9 1995/96 7 6 0 1 40 – 13 1996/97 12 7 3 2 78 – 19 1997/98 9 9 0 0 45 – 15 Group A Group B Group C Group D 1998/99 10 3 1 6 18 – 27 1999/00 16 7 2 7 43 – 44 Sweden (SWE) Czech (CZE) Canada (CAN) Finland (FIN) 2000/01 18 7 4 7 48 – 54 Switzerland (SUI) USA (USA) Slovakia (SVK) Russia (RUS) 2001/02 17 4 2 11 39 – 60 Latvia (LAT) Belarus (BLR) Germany (GER) Ukraine (UKR) 2002/03 24 8 3 13 72 – 75 Italy (ITA) Austria (AUT) Norway (NOR) Denmark (DEN) 2003/04 17 8 2 7 60 – 48 2004/05 16 5 1 10 46 – 44 Prelliimiinary Round Qualliifyiing & Rellegatiion Rounds Date Time No. Game Grp. Arena Date Time No. Game Grp. Arena 2005/06 17 7 3 7 42 – 58 27.04.07 16:15 1 USA – AUT B Mytischi 03.05.07 16:15 25 2A – 2D E Khodynka 27.04.07 17:15 2 UKR – FIN D Khodynka 03.05.07 16:15 26 2B – 2C F Mytischi 2006/07 6 5 0 1 29 – 15 27.04.07 20:15 3 BLR – CZE B Mytischi 03.05.07 20:15 27 3D – 1A E Khodynka Total: 190 89 25 76 765 – 510 27.04.07 21:15 4 RUS – DEN D Khodynka 03.05.07 20:15 28 1B – 3C F Mytischi 28.04.07 16:15 5 SUI – LAT A Khodynka 04.05.07 16:15 29 1C – 3B F Khodynka 28.04.07 16:15 6 GER – CAN C Mytischi 04.05.07 16:15 30 4B – 4C Releg. -
HISTORY of UKRAINE and UKRAINIAN CULTURE Scientific and Methodical Complex for Foreign Students
Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine Flight Academy of National Aviation University IRYNA ROMANKO HISTORY OF UKRAINE AND UKRAINIAN CULTURE Scientific and Methodical Complex for foreign students Part 3 GUIDELINES FOR SELF-STUDY Kropyvnytskyi 2019 ɍȾɄ 94(477):811.111 R e v i e w e r s: Chornyi Olexandr Vasylovych – the Head of the Department of History of Ukraine of Volodymyr Vynnychenko Central Ukrainian State Pedagogical University, Candidate of Historical Sciences, Associate professor. Herasymenko Liudmyla Serhiivna – associate professor of the Department of Foreign Languages of Flight Academy of National Aviation University, Candidate of Pedagogical Sciences, Associate professor. ɇɚɜɱɚɥɶɧɨɦɟɬɨɞɢɱɧɢɣɤɨɦɩɥɟɤɫɩɿɞɝɨɬɨɜɥɟɧɨɡɝɿɞɧɨɪɨɛɨɱɨʀɩɪɨɝɪɚɦɢɧɚɜɱɚɥɶɧɨʀɞɢɫɰɢɩɥɿɧɢ "ȱɫɬɨɪɿɹ ɍɤɪɚʀɧɢ ɬɚ ɭɤɪɚʀɧɫɶɤɨʀ ɤɭɥɶɬɭɪɢ" ɞɥɹ ɿɧɨɡɟɦɧɢɯ ɫɬɭɞɟɧɬɿɜ, ɡɚɬɜɟɪɞɠɟɧɨʀ ɧɚ ɡɚɫɿɞɚɧɧɿ ɤɚɮɟɞɪɢ ɩɪɨɮɟɫɿɣɧɨʀ ɩɟɞɚɝɨɝɿɤɢɬɚɫɨɰɿɚɥɶɧɨɝɭɦɚɧɿɬɚɪɧɢɯɧɚɭɤ (ɩɪɨɬɨɤɨɥʋ1 ɜɿɞ 31 ɫɟɪɩɧɹ 2018 ɪɨɤɭ) ɬɚɫɯɜɚɥɟɧɨʀɆɟɬɨɞɢɱɧɢɦɢ ɪɚɞɚɦɢɮɚɤɭɥɶɬɟɬɿɜɦɟɧɟɞɠɦɟɧɬɭ, ɥɶɨɬɧɨʀɟɤɫɩɥɭɚɬɚɰɿʀɬɚɨɛɫɥɭɝɨɜɭɜɚɧɧɹɩɨɜɿɬɪɹɧɨɝɨɪɭɯɭ. ɇɚɜɱɚɥɶɧɢɣ ɩɨɫɿɛɧɢɤ ɡɧɚɣɨɦɢɬɶ ɿɧɨɡɟɦɧɢɯ ɫɬɭɞɟɧɬɿɜ ɡ ɿɫɬɨɪɿɽɸ ɍɤɪɚʀɧɢ, ʀʀ ɛɚɝɚɬɨɸ ɤɭɥɶɬɭɪɨɸ, ɨɯɨɩɥɸɽ ɧɚɣɜɚɠɥɢɜɿɲɿɚɫɩɟɤɬɢ ɭɤɪɚʀɧɫɶɤɨʀɞɟɪɠɚɜɧɨɫɬɿ. ɋɜɿɬɭɤɪɚʀɧɫɶɤɢɯɧɚɰɿɨɧɚɥɶɧɢɯɬɪɚɞɢɰɿɣ ɭɧɿɤɚɥɶɧɢɣ. ɋɬɨɥɿɬɬɹɦɢ ɪɨɡɜɢɜɚɥɚɫɹ ɫɢɫɬɟɦɚ ɪɢɬɭɚɥɿɜ ɿ ɜɿɪɭɜɚɧɶ, ɹɤɿ ɧɚ ɫɭɱɚɫɧɨɦɭ ɟɬɚɩɿ ɧɚɛɭɜɚɸɬɶ ɧɨɜɨʀ ɩɨɩɭɥɹɪɧɨɫɬɿ. Ʉɧɢɝɚ ɪɨɡɩɨɜɿɞɚɽ ɩɪɨ ɤɚɥɟɧɞɚɪɧɿ ɫɜɹɬɚ ɜ ɍɤɪɚʀɧɿ: ɞɟɪɠɚɜɧɿ, ɪɟɥɿɝɿɣɧɿ, ɩɪɨɮɟɫɿɣɧɿ, ɧɚɪɨɞɧɿ, ɚ ɬɚɤɨɠ ɪɿɡɧɿ ɩɚɦ ɹɬɧɿ ɞɚɬɢ. ɍ ɩɨɫɿɛɧɢɤɭ ɩɪɟɞɫɬɚɜɥɟɧɿ ɪɿɡɧɨɦɚɧɿɬɧɿ ɞɚɧɿ ɩɪɨ ɮɥɨɪɭ ɿ ɮɚɭɧɭ ɤɥɿɦɚɬɢɱɧɢɯ -
Ukraine's Regional Policy
Ukraine’s Regional Policy: Setting Socio-Humanitarian Priorities of Development Ukrainian Center for Independent Political Research Kyiv, 2006 The book presents the first analysis of key issues, directions of development and objectives of Ukraine’s socio-humanitarian policy. The authors studied budget funding of current public and regional socio-humanitarian programs and identified their priorities. The publication highlights some problems of Ukrainian regional policy in the humanitarian area. Specifically, the authors analyzed fundamental values and preferences of the population of different Ukrainian regions and outlined mechanisms for overcoming of existing inter-regional stereotypes. The book covers issues of protection of minority rights, fulfillment of Ukraine’s international obligations, major challenges of implementation of principles of transparency in the context of regional policy development and cooperation of the government with civil society institutions. CONTENT: Introduction…………………………………………………………………………………………3 Chapter 1. Budget Funding of Public Regional Programs in the Socio-Humanitarian Area Budget Funding of Public Programs in the Socio-Humanitarian Area (Regional Context) ………...5 Funding of Socio-Humanitarian Policy Activities (as of January 1, 2005) By Olena Nyzhnyk, Head of the Directorate, Department of Regional Policy, Ministry of Economy and European Integration and Tetyana Kravets, Head, Department of Legislative Provision of Regional Development, Ministry of Economy and European Integration…………………………...……………………….39 Chapter 2. Economic Challenges of Regional Policy "Economy of Provinces": Challenges of Regional Development By Markiyan Datsyshyn, Director, Non-Governmental Analytical Center "Institute of Reforms"…51 Chapter 3. Powers of National Authorities in the Context of Development and Implementation of Ukraine’s Public Socio-Humanitarian Policy Analysis of Powers of National Executive Authorities Responsible for Development and Implementation of Public Socio-Humanitarian Policy of Ukraine…………………………………60 Chapter 4. -
REGISTRY of Winner Projects for the Lots 2 and 3 of the Programme "Trainings
REGISTRY of winner projects for the LOTs 2 and 3 of the programme "Trainings. Exchanges. Residencies. Debuts." Applicatio Contests Requested Sector of n number type. Project Name of the applicant grant sum N LOT Culture and Project descriptionDates of project realization Place of project realization in UCF Project type+E4:E9 organization from UCF in Arts system type UAH International Artil Project effectuates an integration of contemporary dance communities of Ukraine, Austria and Poland through the common creative work of young and experienced choreographers as Internation Public Organization "All‐ well as related professionals. al Ukrainian Association We provide to graduates a way of development in contemporary dance Mobility and cooperatio Performative International "Contemporary Dance area — an opportunity to create a professional work in frames of a Berdychiv, Kyiv, Lublin (Poland), 1 132296 Exchange n projects art Artil Project Platform" highly organized international structure of coaching and mentorship, 05.06.2019 15.10.2019 Linz (Austria) 2 000 000,00 The idea of the project: ‐ to hold All‐Ukrainian seminar in Kharkiv on the exchange of experience in studying, preservation and interpretation (popularization) of the CHARITABLE peculiarities of regional traditions of Ukrainian culture of different ORGANIZATION «CHARITY regions, where the Memorandum on further cooperation will be Mobility and Individual Culture Nine lives of FOUNDATION «KHARKIV signed; 2 110086 Exchange Projects heritage traditions WITH YOU» ‐ to publish the modern